Sentences with phrase «canadian encyclopedic»

To compete nationally with Lexis Nexis Butterworths, Carswell needs to develop and publish both Atlantic and a Quebec Editions of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest, thereby completing the initial vision of its creators and offering content comparable to its competitor.
My expectation is that Carswell will rise to the occasion and ensure the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests continue to play an important role in the practice of law in Canada.
Given that the Fourth Editions are still works in progress, the opportunity still exists to set a new standard for the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests by addressing unresolved issues, most notably those regarding currency and scope, that were not addressed by the editors of the Third Editions.
In the case of a publication like a Canadian Encyclopedic Digest, a «key» Title for the user may be a Title on a relatively obscure subject where secondary sources are not readily available, as opposed to a Title like Criminal Law where many alternative sources of the same information are available to a researcher.
According to the Carswell announcement, «We're streamlining and updating The Canadian Encyclopedic Digest to make sure that you will always find the most current and relevant information.
The Western Edition of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest was launched in 1919, followed by the launch of an Ontario Edition in 1926.
I found with the 6th edition there were no good examples of citing to the Canadian Encyclopedic... [more]
One easily can surmise that the editors of the First Editions contemplated publishing separate Atlantic and Quebec Editions of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests, but fell short of achieving their ultimate objective.
Burroughs started a more ambitious project in 1919, namely the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest (Western) but foolishly imitated Halsbury so closely that he was forced to rewrite and reprint the first issue when challenged on copyright.
Until recently, the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests were unchallenged in the market for legal information.
With any large scale revisions of publications like the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests, transitional issues inevitably arise.
The front matter at the time of writing contains the following text: NOTE: The title «Indians» has been changed Aboriginal Law as part of the transition to the 4th Edition of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest.
The Fourth Western and Ontario Editions of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest are the newest publications to follow the Halsburys Model in Canada.
Unlike Halsburys Laws of Canada, the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests do not integrate relevant provincial law from every province of Canada into every Title.
I found with the 6th edition there were no good examples of citing to the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest or to your typical OBA or LSUC conference paper.
Two of them are well established in the market — the Canadian Encyclopedia Digest (Western Edition), and the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest (Ontario Edition), while the third, Halsburys Laws of Canada is a comparative newcomer on the block.
He was Managing Editor and then Executive Editor at Carswell during the period that the Third Edition of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest (Ontario and Western Editions) were published.
and the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest («a comprehensive statement of the law of Ontario and the four western provinces - provincial, federal and common law - as derived from the case law and legislation») via Westlaw UK (International Materials)
I like the fact that they have «chunked together» individual paragraphs from the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest (CED) into a series of paragraphs in a single view (this avoids having to click on «next» or «previous» as much).
For example, in their rule for citing to legal encyclopedias, they give examples for Halsbury's UK and CJS but not the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest!
[137] In McIlvenna v. Viebig, 2012 BCSC 218, Sigurdson J. referred to the summary referred to in Canadian Encyclopedic Digest, CED (West.
It stressed the reliability of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest and touched briefly on Butterworths Ontario Digest and the Canadian Abridgement.
Relying on R. v Spence, the 2011 edition of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest, under Evidence, proposes this summary of the law:
As a result, many law students will graduate without even knowing of the «Canadian Encyclopedic Digest?
The first post is a generic description of the Halsburys Model and will be followed by posts on Halsburys Laws of Canada, the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests, and the Juris Classeur Quebec, three publications of the same ilk or genre that are designed to provide legal researchers with «a complete statement» of the laws of Canada, the Western Provinces, Ontario and Quebec.
Non-Butterworths companies applying the same product concept have had to look elsewhere for inspiration for the names for their Halburys clones — hence the «Canadian Encyclopedic Digest ``, the «Laws of Australia ``, and the «Corpus Juris Secundum ``.
I don't imagine that Quicklaw or the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest will have much on this question (although no doubt some witty legal scholar can prove me wrong), so I will need to look elsewhere.
In Canada, there are three publications that follow the Halsburys model --(1) the Canadian Encyclopedia Digest (Western Edition), and (2) the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest (Ontario Edition), both published by Carswell, and (3) Halsburys Laws of Canada published by LexisNexis Butterworths.
Alas, the Canadian Copyright Act expressly provides for protection of architectural plans and works and an entry in the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest cites Hay v Saunders (1958), 30 CPR 81 (Ont HC) as authority for the notion that «An architect may have a copyright in the building plans as a literary work and in the design of the building as an artistic work when it is erected.»
No law school needs thousands of linear feet of primary legal resources (law reports, statutes, etc) or journals in print anymore: these and the necessary related finding tools (The Canadian Abridgment, The Canadian Encyclopedic Digest, Halsbury's Law of Canada, case and statute citators, etc) are all available online, which is also how they're accessed in practice.
As well as being the founding editor of Canadian Criminal Cases, W.J. Tremeear was one of the original Managing Editors of the Canadian Encyclopedic Digests and the author of literally dozens of titles in the first edition of both the C.E.D. Western and the C.E.D. Ontario.

Not exact matches

This encyclopedic «Who's Who» of Canadian science includes people both living and dead who have made significant contributions to science.
The Michigan company ProQuest bought Micromedia, owners of CAD, in 2002, and decided a couple of weeks ago that Canadians would no longer manage the Directory: control of that venerable and encyclopedic institution has been whistled south to Ann Arbor.
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