I commented on the decision in
a previous Slaw column.)
As I detailed in
a previous SLAW post, litigators are being targeted on debt collection frauds and business lawyers are being targeted on business loan frauds.
The Claude Robinson plagiarism case (you can read
previous Slaw posts on the case here and here) is not yet over!
In
a previous Slaw blog post, we discussed the Ontario government's establishment of the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan (ORPP) by January 1, 2017 with enrollment starting in 2016.
In
a previous Slaw post, we indicated that Quebec's Minister of Justice and Attorney General Jean - Marc Fournier announced the filing of a draft regulation aimed at making the Gazette officielle du Québec available free of charge on the Internet.
I suspect the following «Canadian» sites have already been mentioned in
previous SLAW postings, but for those wanting a single listing of some of the better online resources:
Connie... refer to page 2 of your passport... that is the information that will be included in the chip... more information on how the chip works is found in
the previous Slaw post... link provided in first paragraph of this post.
In
a previous Slaw post we discussed growing privacy concerns raised by the features used to enhance security measures for the new Canadian electronic passports.
We have already examined this case and the topic in
previous Slaw posts here, here and here.
Following
our previous Slaw post, where we commented that the Federal Government decided to appeal the June 15 British Columbia Supreme Court ruling that struck down the Criminal Code ban on physician - assisted suicide, and seeking to stay all aspect of the decision, including the exemption order found in the ruling.
A short follow - up to
a previous Slaw post on e - passports and privacy.
This is a short update to
previous Slaw posts on Arizona's 2010 controversial new anti-immigration measures.
Following
our previous Slaw post, where we commented on the June 15 British Columbia Supreme Court ruling that struck down the Criminal Code ban on physician - assisted suicide.
The previous Slaw article focused on the CRT's quasi-inferior court function, as a diversion for small claims actions for amounts below $ 5,000.
You can read more on the case and topic in
previous Slaw posts here and here.
We provided a commentary on the case in
a previous Slaw blog post here, so I will not go into details.
And, as I mentioned in
a previous Slaw post, law libraries worldwide collaborated to build a digital library of Haitian law books.
Previous Slaw blog entries have outlined the multitude of distance - related obstacles that prevent many rural and small - town Canadians from finding quick and affordable resolutions to their legal problems.
In
a previous Slaw post, we examined one of the cases; the case of Nadia Eweida, a former British Airways (BA) worker, who challenged her employer through the British courts after facing a disciplinary action of unpaid suspension from work in 2006 for refusing to take off her cross necklace.
I wrote about the meaning and purpose of section 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act in
a previous Slaw post.
Also, Irwin Law books aren't available on QL to those of us in the academic world (see
previous SLAW thread) but if they were, I believe they would be compatible with screen readers as Quicklaw appears to use standard html and search results can be retrieved in Word or plain text formats.
There does not seem to be many changes from the draft Integrated Accessibility Standards Regulation, which was published in February 2011 for public review and commentary, and which, we discussed in
previous Slaw posts.
In many
previous Slaw posts I have mentioned my keen interest in justice reform — particularly for families.
To follow up on
a previous Slaw blog post on proposed Quebec regulations to better control who may provide provincial immigration services to immigrants.
My previous Slaw column looked at the question of whether lawyers are «hijacking» mediation and arbitration.
This is the third follow up to
previous Slaw posts (here and here) regarding IQT's closure.
Failing to acknowledge that this latter possibility is still very much alive is particularly problematic given that, in some of
your previous SLAW blogposts in support of allowing ABS, you have highlighted the emergence of the not - for - profit ownership model of ABS, in the form of Salvos Legal in Australia, as proof that ABS can contribute to improving access to justice.
Not exact matches
Here is a photo of a
previous time I made these and topped them with the broccoli
slaw.
This fact may surprise some colleagues familiar with my
previous blogging efforts at the VLLB and
Slaw.
On April 3, 2017, I informed the same Senior ADM of the federal Department of Justice of the existence of this new National Standard of Canada, (declared by the Standards Council the
previous month), attaching a chronology listing all of the above events, and a copy of the
Slaw article cited above.
As discussed in a
previous post on
Slaw, the Law Society of Upper Canada sent licensee candidates an invoice last week for $ 3,164 on top of the $ 1,695 already required to write the bar.
I am normally loathe to bother readers times with humorous emails and the like, but the following YouTube video is particularly funny (and does not appear to have yet been posted on
SLAW — I checked the
previous YouTube postings).
Of late I seem to have been duplicating
previous postings, but I've looked through recent postings and searched
previous ones, and to my surprise nobody on
SLAW seems to have put in a direct plug for the upcoming CALL / ACBD Conference from May 6 - 9 in Ottawa.
I've made some
previous observations both here on
SLAW and on the NSRLP blog that might be relevant to this post and the topic of SRLs overall, but am still very much in the information - gathering stage of my analysis.
Some
previous attention to this project has been paid on
Slaw here (2011), here (2012) and here (2016).
Slaw sure does a great job of giving students a voice when they delete mine and another student's comments from a
previous article about articling.
i am sympathetic to the desire of the holding library to leverage their «popular» items to enhance access to less popular items in their collection (tying nicely in to
slaw's «grey literature» discussion of the
previous week), but rather than impose a contract on the recipients of the copies, a more preferable model would be the one used for the alberta law collection.
Let's not forget a
previous posting from
Slaw discussing the first» crowd - sourced» Constitution as Iceland proposes further constitutional changes through public input by way of Twitter and Facebook.
It's very apropos that the immediately
previous article in
Slaw was «The Internet's Most Hated Lawyer».
We have had
previous postings and comments related to this topic on
SLAW and I still think the concept of a Canadian wide grey literature legal depository is worth considering.
We examined the
previous Bill (which is similar to the new Bill) on
Slaw here.
I know from
previous postings on
SLAW that some Toronto law firms are considering subscribing to Hein.