Comments on the role of the first chief justice of Upper Canada, William Osgoode (1754-1824), on shaping the law during a period of counter-revolutionary and anti-democratic repression throughout the British Empire. Concludes that laws were often presented as emergency legislation that nevertheless effectively became permanent, challenging civil liberties in times of political or social conflic
In this Article, I argue that the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s location of the principles of fundame...
This is a book that every student of Canadian law should read in the first month of law school, befo...
Legal historians divide European law into two principal families: common law (British law) and civil...
Comments on the role of the first chief justice of Upper Canada, William Osgoode (1754-1824), on sha...
When in December, 1791, Upper Canada began her separate provincial career, her first Lieutenant-Gove...
This article focuses on musings and silences in the margins of Canadian Chief Justice William Osgood...
The creation and mandate of the Canadian Department of Justice mirrored a congruence of law and poli...
In 1848, a Quebec judge changed the law of defamation to accord with the newly-applicable constituti...
The mid-nineteenth century was an age of reform in the civil courts of the common-law world. Why, in...
Based on a two-year project launched by the Journal. Its goal was to engage students, faculty, and a...
grantor: University of TorontoIn frontier Ontario, the system of criminal justice administ...
Law, Rhetoric and Irony is important reading for professional constitutional law teachers in Canada ...
The thesis primarily examines the legality of the courtsmartial that followed the 1838-1839 rebellio...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
This article examines a series of cases launched in the Nova Scotia courts following the Cumberland ...
In this Article, I argue that the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s location of the principles of fundame...
This is a book that every student of Canadian law should read in the first month of law school, befo...
Legal historians divide European law into two principal families: common law (British law) and civil...
Comments on the role of the first chief justice of Upper Canada, William Osgoode (1754-1824), on sha...
When in December, 1791, Upper Canada began her separate provincial career, her first Lieutenant-Gove...
This article focuses on musings and silences in the margins of Canadian Chief Justice William Osgood...
The creation and mandate of the Canadian Department of Justice mirrored a congruence of law and poli...
In 1848, a Quebec judge changed the law of defamation to accord with the newly-applicable constituti...
The mid-nineteenth century was an age of reform in the civil courts of the common-law world. Why, in...
Based on a two-year project launched by the Journal. Its goal was to engage students, faculty, and a...
grantor: University of TorontoIn frontier Ontario, the system of criminal justice administ...
Law, Rhetoric and Irony is important reading for professional constitutional law teachers in Canada ...
The thesis primarily examines the legality of the courtsmartial that followed the 1838-1839 rebellio...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
This article examines a series of cases launched in the Nova Scotia courts following the Cumberland ...
In this Article, I argue that the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s location of the principles of fundame...
This is a book that every student of Canadian law should read in the first month of law school, befo...
Legal historians divide European law into two principal families: common law (British law) and civil...