Although law and economics has had a definitive impact on legal studies in the United States and English-speaking Canada, and continues to make inroads in Europe, the Province of Quebec remains insulated. Not only is institutional recognition of the discipline absent, its practitioners are also few and isolated. In this short chapter, I try to offer an up-to-date picture of the field within Quebec’s law schools as well as some hypotheses that could explain the current state of affairs. JEL classification: K0
The present Faculty of Law of the University of Ottawa was inaugurated in 1953, although law had bee...
Canada is a bilingual and bi-jurisdictional country. Most provinces and territories are mainly Engli...
To start, I\u27d like you to imagine an agglomeration of twenty to thirty jurisdictions experiencing...
Law and economics is quite a new field of research but there is a noticeable increase in its influen...
Some remarkable things have occurred in Quebec legal education over the last forty years. All phases...
Scholarship in law (la doctrine) plays a more important role in the civil law tradition than in the ...
The European law and economics movement started early in Sweden. However, the dialogue between econo...
Quebec private law, though not the public law, can be regarded as a reasonably characteristic exampl...
This book contains 30 essays covering many aspects of Quebec law,\u27 divided into five sections: l\...
The majority of Western systems of private law is habitually divided by scholars into civil law syst...
The purpose of this article is to describe how one undergraduate law program is operating, the objec...
We are in danger of losing the creative tension in Canadian legal education, a creative tension that...
Prior to 1960, most North American law schools paid attention only to anti-trust, public utility reg...
The experiment of the Law Department as a new approach to legal education has been going on now for ...
It may appear immodest to note how appropriate it is that the Dalhousie Law Journal should include S...
The present Faculty of Law of the University of Ottawa was inaugurated in 1953, although law had bee...
Canada is a bilingual and bi-jurisdictional country. Most provinces and territories are mainly Engli...
To start, I\u27d like you to imagine an agglomeration of twenty to thirty jurisdictions experiencing...
Law and economics is quite a new field of research but there is a noticeable increase in its influen...
Some remarkable things have occurred in Quebec legal education over the last forty years. All phases...
Scholarship in law (la doctrine) plays a more important role in the civil law tradition than in the ...
The European law and economics movement started early in Sweden. However, the dialogue between econo...
Quebec private law, though not the public law, can be regarded as a reasonably characteristic exampl...
This book contains 30 essays covering many aspects of Quebec law,\u27 divided into five sections: l\...
The majority of Western systems of private law is habitually divided by scholars into civil law syst...
The purpose of this article is to describe how one undergraduate law program is operating, the objec...
We are in danger of losing the creative tension in Canadian legal education, a creative tension that...
Prior to 1960, most North American law schools paid attention only to anti-trust, public utility reg...
The experiment of the Law Department as a new approach to legal education has been going on now for ...
It may appear immodest to note how appropriate it is that the Dalhousie Law Journal should include S...
The present Faculty of Law of the University of Ottawa was inaugurated in 1953, although law had bee...
Canada is a bilingual and bi-jurisdictional country. Most provinces and territories are mainly Engli...
To start, I\u27d like you to imagine an agglomeration of twenty to thirty jurisdictions experiencing...