At the same time that Canadian public law jurisprudence has grappled with some very key cases on bias, a vibrant debate has also raged over the meaning and scope of the notion of impartiality within political and moral philosophy. Spurred by Rawls’ view of liberalism and culminating in deliberative democracy, this debate evolved over a span of more than four decades, yet, rarely, if at all, is this philosophical literature referred to in the public law jurisprudence dealing with impartiality. This paper inquires into whether the debates surrounding impartiality in political and moral philosophy and those in Canadian public law share common ground. In what ways might this literature and jurisprudence speak to one another? The author argues t...
Scholars have traditionally analyzed judicial impartiality piecemeal, in disconnected debates on dis...
In this article, I explore both the idea and practice of adjudicative ethics in the context of admin...
The paper presents issues that are the main subject of Sara Blake’s ‘Administrative Law in Canada.’ ...
At the same time that Canadian public law jurisprudence has grappled with some key cases on bias, a ...
At the same time that Canadian public law jurisprudence has grappled with some key cases on bias, a ...
Author advocates the idea that impartiality is a general legal principle of any decision making proc...
The Canadian administrative state has changed significantly since the first half of the twentieth ce...
Recent administrative law decisions from the Supreme Court of Canada have renewed the idea that ther...
Public law scholarship in the common law tradition often aims at elucidating a connection between la...
Justice Rand's judgment in Roncarelli v Duplessis is rightly reputed to be one of the classic judgme...
In Canadian public law, the foundational case of Roncarelli v. Duplessis stands for the proposition ...
This thesis surveys the last three decades of Canadian jurisprudence on the standards of review appl...
Although the Supreme Court of Canada’s seminal decision in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick has now been ci...
This article draws out the ways in which Justice Rothstein grappled with complexity in administrativ...
This chapter discusses several of the key attributes of the rule of law and explores their relevance...
Scholars have traditionally analyzed judicial impartiality piecemeal, in disconnected debates on dis...
In this article, I explore both the idea and practice of adjudicative ethics in the context of admin...
The paper presents issues that are the main subject of Sara Blake’s ‘Administrative Law in Canada.’ ...
At the same time that Canadian public law jurisprudence has grappled with some key cases on bias, a ...
At the same time that Canadian public law jurisprudence has grappled with some key cases on bias, a ...
Author advocates the idea that impartiality is a general legal principle of any decision making proc...
The Canadian administrative state has changed significantly since the first half of the twentieth ce...
Recent administrative law decisions from the Supreme Court of Canada have renewed the idea that ther...
Public law scholarship in the common law tradition often aims at elucidating a connection between la...
Justice Rand's judgment in Roncarelli v Duplessis is rightly reputed to be one of the classic judgme...
In Canadian public law, the foundational case of Roncarelli v. Duplessis stands for the proposition ...
This thesis surveys the last three decades of Canadian jurisprudence on the standards of review appl...
Although the Supreme Court of Canada’s seminal decision in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick has now been ci...
This article draws out the ways in which Justice Rothstein grappled with complexity in administrativ...
This chapter discusses several of the key attributes of the rule of law and explores their relevance...
Scholars have traditionally analyzed judicial impartiality piecemeal, in disconnected debates on dis...
In this article, I explore both the idea and practice of adjudicative ethics in the context of admin...
The paper presents issues that are the main subject of Sara Blake’s ‘Administrative Law in Canada.’ ...