The basic or overarching question addressed by the author is why institutional law reform in Nova Scotia has experienced such operational difficulties and challenges, particularly in relation to funding, to the point where it can be described as a perilous enterprise. In the process of searching for an answer to this question, the author examines the origins and development of organized law reform in Nova Scotia over the last 65 years, with special attention paid to the experience of Nova Scotia\u27s two statutory commissions. As a backdrop to the discussion, the author examines the complicated process of law reform itself and suggests reasons why governments are not the most suitable agencies to carry out this type of work. Finally, the au...
On Friday, January 31, 1986 at 4:00 p.m., The Nova Scotia Legal Aid Commission and the Provincial De...
This article examines a series of cases launched in the Nova Scotia courts following the Cumberland ...
Judicial examination of the criminal process in Canada generally, and Nova Scotia in particular cont...
The basic or overarching question addressed by the author is why institutional law reform in Nova Sc...
The story of institutional law reform in Canada has been described by one veteran as ‘somewhat troub...
The Nova Scotia Law Reform Advisory Commission has now been in existence for two and a half years, h...
The term law reform has a positive connotation. It indicates that those engaged in the process are...
The work of the Law Reform Commission of Canada prompts a reconsideration of our understanding of th...
Unlike a number of the subject areas covered by this symposium, Administrative Law in a Nova Scotia ...
Law reform is everywhere in Canada. On all sides substantial changes in diverse areas of the law are...
It is now generally acknowledged that during the course of the last decade the provincial law reform...
In August 1985, the Law Reform Commission of Canada released a working paper entitled The Legal Sta...
The Law Reform Commission of British Columbia was constituted by the Law Reform Commission Act\u27 w...
This thesis is an investigation of the process of law reform as it was illustrated by the Corporate ...
Expressed in simplest terms Nova Scotia law, generally speaking, is an amalgamation of English commo...
On Friday, January 31, 1986 at 4:00 p.m., The Nova Scotia Legal Aid Commission and the Provincial De...
This article examines a series of cases launched in the Nova Scotia courts following the Cumberland ...
Judicial examination of the criminal process in Canada generally, and Nova Scotia in particular cont...
The basic or overarching question addressed by the author is why institutional law reform in Nova Sc...
The story of institutional law reform in Canada has been described by one veteran as ‘somewhat troub...
The Nova Scotia Law Reform Advisory Commission has now been in existence for two and a half years, h...
The term law reform has a positive connotation. It indicates that those engaged in the process are...
The work of the Law Reform Commission of Canada prompts a reconsideration of our understanding of th...
Unlike a number of the subject areas covered by this symposium, Administrative Law in a Nova Scotia ...
Law reform is everywhere in Canada. On all sides substantial changes in diverse areas of the law are...
It is now generally acknowledged that during the course of the last decade the provincial law reform...
In August 1985, the Law Reform Commission of Canada released a working paper entitled The Legal Sta...
The Law Reform Commission of British Columbia was constituted by the Law Reform Commission Act\u27 w...
This thesis is an investigation of the process of law reform as it was illustrated by the Corporate ...
Expressed in simplest terms Nova Scotia law, generally speaking, is an amalgamation of English commo...
On Friday, January 31, 1986 at 4:00 p.m., The Nova Scotia Legal Aid Commission and the Provincial De...
This article examines a series of cases launched in the Nova Scotia courts following the Cumberland ...
Judicial examination of the criminal process in Canada generally, and Nova Scotia in particular cont...