The trilogy of family law decisions, released by the Supreme Court of Canada on 4 June 1987, represents perhaps the most important statement of the past two decades by Canada\u27s highest court on this rapidly changing area of law. Although decided under the repealed Divorce Act of 1968, judicial analyses of support and domestic contracts are likely to be little altered under the 1985 Act. Furthermore, that these cases reveal the Court\u27s underlying philosophy of the new family law as a whole suggests a significance that transcends specific amendments to the Act. With respect to the outcome of each individual case, specific pronouncements of legal doctrine, and the Supreme Court\u27s apparent understanding of the central features and purp...
Significantly revised and completely updated (to 31 March 2015), the second edition of Families and ...
The objective of this paper is to alert Bench and Bar to the cutting edge of tomorrow’s arguments in...
Families and the Law is significantly revised and completely updated to March 31, 2012. Like its ear...
The trilogy of family law decisions, released by the Supreme Court of Canada on 4 June 1987, represe...
In the 1998-99 Term, the Supreme Court of Canada handed down seven family law decisions. The most im...
Journal articleThe issue of personal choice has become central to Canadian family law. Much of the d...
This work applies the lens of relational theory to five Ontario Superior Court of Justice cases wher...
The Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines facilitate discretionary spousal support determinations unde...
While family law is not a unique subject matter for research, it is however, a much neglected area.\...
Decisions of the United States Supreme Court beginning with Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) have tran...
The thought that a Canadian, who has difficulty mastering the Federal Divorce Law together with that...
The authors use the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in Bruker v. Marcovitz as a lens for examinin...
Taking a broad approach to the meaning of “access to justice”, to include not only physical and fina...
Abstract: In 2007 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled on the case of Bruker v. Marcovitz with the majo...
This paper takes Justice Wilson’s majority judgments in the Pelech v. Pelech trilogy (1987) as point...
Significantly revised and completely updated (to 31 March 2015), the second edition of Families and ...
The objective of this paper is to alert Bench and Bar to the cutting edge of tomorrow’s arguments in...
Families and the Law is significantly revised and completely updated to March 31, 2012. Like its ear...
The trilogy of family law decisions, released by the Supreme Court of Canada on 4 June 1987, represe...
In the 1998-99 Term, the Supreme Court of Canada handed down seven family law decisions. The most im...
Journal articleThe issue of personal choice has become central to Canadian family law. Much of the d...
This work applies the lens of relational theory to five Ontario Superior Court of Justice cases wher...
The Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines facilitate discretionary spousal support determinations unde...
While family law is not a unique subject matter for research, it is however, a much neglected area.\...
Decisions of the United States Supreme Court beginning with Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) have tran...
The thought that a Canadian, who has difficulty mastering the Federal Divorce Law together with that...
The authors use the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in Bruker v. Marcovitz as a lens for examinin...
Taking a broad approach to the meaning of “access to justice”, to include not only physical and fina...
Abstract: In 2007 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled on the case of Bruker v. Marcovitz with the majo...
This paper takes Justice Wilson’s majority judgments in the Pelech v. Pelech trilogy (1987) as point...
Significantly revised and completely updated (to 31 March 2015), the second edition of Families and ...
The objective of this paper is to alert Bench and Bar to the cutting edge of tomorrow’s arguments in...
Families and the Law is significantly revised and completely updated to March 31, 2012. Like its ear...