As the courts in Canada continue to struggle with difficult issues relating to the enforcement of arbitration agreements and the enforcement of arbitral awards, it is worth looking at how courts in
other common law jurisdictions see the relationship between the courts and arbitration.
Not exact matches
The executive branch in each Canadian
jurisdiction (provinces, territories, federal) is free to enact its own copyright and licensing policy in relation to the work product of its public servants, and so does in a variety of ways, some more permissive than
others (
see Noel Cox, «Copyright in Statutes, Regulations, and Judicial Decisions in
Common Law Jurisdictions: Public Ownership or Commercial Enterprise?»
They can also look to
see what
other common law jurisdictions have done (with exception... some
laws do not port for any number of reasons).
Just because they have it does not mean the state lawyers like employing it and many
jurisdictions see it as full on corruption in
other parts of the world, even the
Common Law jurisdictions.