The creation of the Canadian Judicial Council in 1971 and the gradual disappearance of county and district court judges into the superior court judiciary filled a lacuna in the Constitution Act, 1867. The tenure of county court judges was less secure than that of superior court judges, which was constitutionally entrenched and protected. The Judges Act, passed originally to provide for the removal of county court judges, articulated a mechanism which was extended to superior court judges at about the same time as county and district courts were beginning to disappear from the Canadian judicial scene. The lack of such a mechanism had, forovera century, rendered superiorcourtjudges virtually irremovable; none was removed, though some resigned...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
After Confederation, the provinces administered justice but the dominion government appointed judges...
Justice Wilson’s concurring reasons for judgment in the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Nation...
The creation of the Canadian Judicial Council in 1971 and the gradual disappearance of county and di...
vii, 149 leaves ; 29 cm.This paper will attempt to explore the history and function of judical disag...
When in December, 1791, Upper Canada began her separate provincial career, her first Lieutenant-Gove...
The issue of judicial compensation is fundamentally marked by the challenge of balancing two constit...
The recent decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Reference re: Remuneration of Judges in th...
Professor Hogg describes the duties of Chief Justices in Canadian courts, and explains that the effe...
Current legal debates on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Canada have focused on the apparent s...
Appeal court judges do not just vote and run; they vote and then they explain, at length, why theirs...
This empirical study explores the legal and non-legal factors influencing trial judges’ decisions to...
The evolution of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has been well described elsewhere.\u27 This paper ...
Over the last number of years, a significant number of Canadian judges have joined the American Judg...
Quasi-judicial officers play a large role in court administration and adjudication in the legal syst...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
After Confederation, the provinces administered justice but the dominion government appointed judges...
Justice Wilson’s concurring reasons for judgment in the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Nation...
The creation of the Canadian Judicial Council in 1971 and the gradual disappearance of county and di...
vii, 149 leaves ; 29 cm.This paper will attempt to explore the history and function of judical disag...
When in December, 1791, Upper Canada began her separate provincial career, her first Lieutenant-Gove...
The issue of judicial compensation is fundamentally marked by the challenge of balancing two constit...
The recent decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Reference re: Remuneration of Judges in th...
Professor Hogg describes the duties of Chief Justices in Canadian courts, and explains that the effe...
Current legal debates on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Canada have focused on the apparent s...
Appeal court judges do not just vote and run; they vote and then they explain, at length, why theirs...
This empirical study explores the legal and non-legal factors influencing trial judges’ decisions to...
The evolution of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has been well described elsewhere.\u27 This paper ...
Over the last number of years, a significant number of Canadian judges have joined the American Judg...
Quasi-judicial officers play a large role in court administration and adjudication in the legal syst...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
After Confederation, the provinces administered justice but the dominion government appointed judges...
Justice Wilson’s concurring reasons for judgment in the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Nation...