Reinstallation of the Spindle Whorl

 

The Spindle Whorl was reinstalled in the Law Library on October 27th.  The piece is now on a specially built riser,  designed to provide a  protection from inadvertent bumping and touching.   Please do come by and view the piece.  Information about the artist and this piece can be found in the book Susan Point : Spindle Whorl  a copy of which is available for perusal in the nearby  seating area.

Among the many pieces of  Legacy Art installed at the Law Library is Susan Point’s Good Luck (Double Salmon Spindle Whorl), 1998 . The piece was on loan to the Vancouver Art Gallery from February until June, for the show Spindle Whorl, which was devoted to Point’s prints and sculptures. The exhibit catalog is available in the Library. The piece was returned on June 8th, coincidentally during the  Faculty’s  hosting of the 2017 joint conference of the Canadian Association of Law Teachers (CALT) and the Association for Canadian Clinical Legal Education (ACCLE).  Good Luck was reinstalled to a prominent,  welcoming location in the Law Library.

 

New Resource: Max Planck Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law

Researchers at UVic now have access to a new online resource licenced by the UVic Libraries, the Max Planck Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law located on the same platform as Oxford Constitutions of the World.

The Encyclopedia, launched by Oxford University Press this past spring, contains a growing number of peer-reviewed analytical articles on a variety constitutional law topics in a comparative context. Currently containing over 90 in-depth articles, the Encyclopedia will contain between 500-600 articles once completed. The Encyclopedia is full text searchable and can also be browsed by topic, subject or jurisdiction.

The Max Planck Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law is just one of the many resources on comparative constitutional law available at the UVic Law Library. Below  you will find a small sample of the many resources on comparative constitutional law.

Happy researching!

Related resources:

Agreement-in-Principle Reached in Sixties Scoop Litigation

On Friday, the Government of Canada and the plaintiffs in the Sixties Scoop class action announced that they have reached an Agreement-in-Principle to resolve the Sixties Scoop litigation.

Earlier this year, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled that the Federal Crown owed and breached a “common law duty of care to take reasonable steps to prevent on-reserve Indian children in Ontario, who had been placed in the care of non-aboriginal foster or adoptive parents, from losing their aboriginal identity”(Brown v Canada (Attorney General), 2017 ONSC 251 at para 85).

The Agreement-in-Principle includes a compensation fund for survivors and funding for the creation of a Foundation to provide communities and individuals access to  education, healing and wellness, and commemoration activities. The Foundation will also work towards preserving and revitalizing Indigenous languages and cultures.

You can find more about the Agreement-in-Principle, including, Chief Marcia Brown Martel’s response, on the Sixties Scoop Class Action website and   Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada’s press release.

For more background information on the Sixties Scoop, below are a few items in UVic Libraries’ collection:

  • A History of Adoption Law in Ontario, 1921 – 2015 (Chapter 9: Indigenous Children and Adoption) – Lori Chambers. Call number: KEO228 C53 2016 (Law Library)
  • A Generation Removed : The Fostering and Adoption of Indigenous Children in the Postwar World (Chapter 6: The Indigenous Child Welfare Crisis in Canada)- Margaret Jacobs. Call number: HV875.6 J33 2014 (McPherson Library)
  • Moving Toward Positive Systems of Child and Family Welfare (Chapter 3: Aboriginal Child Welfare) – eds. Gary Cameron, Nick Coady, and Gerald R. Adams. Online
  • A literature review and annotated bibliography on aspects of Aboriginal child welfare in Canada
    – Marlyn Bennett, Cindy Blackstock and Richard De La Ronde. Online.
  • Stolen from our Embrace : The Abduction of First Nations Children and the Restoration of Aboriginal Communities – Suzanne Fournier and Ernie Crey. Call number: E78 C2 F675 (McPherson Library)
  • Four Decades of Child Welfare Services to Native Indians in Ontario: A Contemporary Attempt to Understand the ‘Sixties Scoop’ in Historical, Socioeconomic and Political Perspective – Joyce Barbara Timpson. Online
  • Governing Childhood (Chapter V: Therapies of Freedom: The Colonization of Aboriginal Childhood) – Anne McGillivray. Call Number: HQ789 G658 (McPherson Library)
  • Richard Cardinal : Cry from a Diary of a Métis Child – National Film of Canada. Streaming video.
  • Native Children and the Child Welfare System – Patrick Johnston. Call number: E78 C2 J63 (Law Library)
  • No Quiet Place : Final Report Review Committee on Indian and Metis Adoptions and Placements – Edwin C Kimelman. Call Number: KF8210 C45 M36 1985 (Law Library)

 

Appeal – Call for Submissions

It’s not too late to submit an article or case comment to Appeal: Review of Current Law and Law Reform.

Appeal is currently accepting submissions for volume 23, to be published in Spring 2018.

Appeal is a student run law journal published at the University of Victoria’s Faculty of Law. Appeal publishes articles, case comments and book reviews offering insightful commentary on Canadian law and comparative law.

The deadline for submissions is October 7, 2016. Send submissions electronically to appeal@uvic.ca. For further details including submission guidelines visit the Appeal website.