This article offers an empirical examination of policies on the publication of refugee law decisions in Canada’s Federal Court. In 2015, the Court issued a notice describing the Court’s general practice of publishing written reasons in cases that the deciding judge considers as having precedential value and of issuing unpublished judgments in cases that the deciding judge does not view as precedential. In 2018, the Court reversed course and issued a new notice. This time, the Court indicated that all final decisions on the merits will be published. Drawing on data obtained via automated data scraping processes from thousands of online court dockets and from published decisions in cases involving refugee judicial reviews, the article examine...
Although refugees are protected by a myriad of legal norms, this article shows that the domestic pro...
What do the BCE case of 2008, the Securities Reference case of 2010, the Senate Reform Reference cas...
Canadian refugee status adjudicators must choose between two opposing bodies of law, one of which re...
This article offers an empirical examination of policies on the publication of refugee law decisions...
This article offers an empirical examination of judicial review in Canada’s Federal Court in the ref...
Refugee claimants who have received a negative decision from the Immigration and Refugee Board somet...
La connaissance d'office permet aux décideurs de prendre en considération, de leur propre chef, un l...
In light of rising numbers in the global refugee population, as well as new ideas for reforming the ...
Canada’s refugee determination system was revised in 2012. One key feature of the new process is a q...
In light of rising numbers in the global refugee population, as well as new ideas for reforming the ...
An unfair system has evolved over the past fifteen years in the federal courts. The federal courts c...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
The following article is a case comment on Attorney General of Canada v. Patrick Francis Ward, a rec...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s standard of review jurisprudence has been marked by the ascendancy of ...
The refugee status determination (RSD) process in Canada, like the RSD processes of other states, cu...
Although refugees are protected by a myriad of legal norms, this article shows that the domestic pro...
What do the BCE case of 2008, the Securities Reference case of 2010, the Senate Reform Reference cas...
Canadian refugee status adjudicators must choose between two opposing bodies of law, one of which re...
This article offers an empirical examination of policies on the publication of refugee law decisions...
This article offers an empirical examination of judicial review in Canada’s Federal Court in the ref...
Refugee claimants who have received a negative decision from the Immigration and Refugee Board somet...
La connaissance d'office permet aux décideurs de prendre en considération, de leur propre chef, un l...
In light of rising numbers in the global refugee population, as well as new ideas for reforming the ...
Canada’s refugee determination system was revised in 2012. One key feature of the new process is a q...
In light of rising numbers in the global refugee population, as well as new ideas for reforming the ...
An unfair system has evolved over the past fifteen years in the federal courts. The federal courts c...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
The following article is a case comment on Attorney General of Canada v. Patrick Francis Ward, a rec...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s standard of review jurisprudence has been marked by the ascendancy of ...
The refugee status determination (RSD) process in Canada, like the RSD processes of other states, cu...
Although refugees are protected by a myriad of legal norms, this article shows that the domestic pro...
What do the BCE case of 2008, the Securities Reference case of 2010, the Senate Reform Reference cas...
Canadian refugee status adjudicators must choose between two opposing bodies of law, one of which re...