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Red lexisnexis logoThe law library is pleased to share that we now have access to over 150 full-text textbooks and loose-leaf through Lexis Advance Quicklaw Academic Plus.

In addition to a number of key Canadian legal treatises, you will also find new forms and precedents, Canada Quantums, Halsbury’s Law of England, and other international primary law materials.

Access content through your account in LexisAdvance Quicklaw – either by searching for the title or by browsing by Practice Area or Content Type > Commentary & Textbooks.

Researchers can browse by chapter or section using detailed table of contents or keyword searches can be conducted. Case law references are linked to the full text of the decisions.

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Links to key Canadian legal treatises are also available through our Key Legal Treatise and Textbook Guide.

New! – Non-law students and faculty may now access this content with their netlink ID in LexisAdvance Quicklaw Plus.

Professor John Borrows awarded W. Wesley Pue Book Prize and Distinguished Alumni Award

The cover art of "Law's Indigenous Ethics" by John Books

Congratulations to Professor John Borrows for being awarded the Canadian Law and Society Association’s 2020 W. Wesley Pue Book Prize for his book “Law’s Indigenous Ethics”. The prize is awarded to the best book on law and society in the past year.  “Law’s Indigenous Ethics” is available in law library in print or online.

A headshot of John Borrows

 

Professor Borrows was also awarded the 2020 Distinguished Alumni Award by the University of Toronto Association of Geography Alumni.

 

Check out some more of Professor Borrows scholarship held in UVic Libraries Collections:

  • John Borrows, Drawing Out Law: A Spirit’s Guide (Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2010). Call number KIB190 B677 2010.  or online
  • John Borrows. Canada’s Indigenous Constitution (Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2010). Call number KIB190 B673 2010 or online
  • John Borrows, Freedom and Indigenous Constitutionalism (Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2016). Call number KIA20 C66B6738 2016.
  • John Borrows, Indigenous Law and Governance: Challenging Pre-contact and Post-contact Distinctions in Canadian Law (Montreal, Les Éditions Thémis, 2017). Call number KI270 B67 2017.
  • John Borrows, Recovering Canada: The Resurgence of Indigenous Law (Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2002). Call number KE7709 B68 2002
  • Michael Asch, John Borrows, & James Tully, eds, Resurgence and Reconciliation: Indigenous-Settler Relations and Earth Teachings (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2018). Call number KIB530 R47 2018
  • John Borrows & Michael Coyle, eds, The Right Relationship: Reimagining the Implementation of Historical Treaties (Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2017). Call number KIB129 R54 2017
  • John Borrows, Seven Generations, Seven Teachings: Ending the Indian Act (West Vancouver, BC: National Centre for First Nations Governance, 2008). Electronic

Congratulations John!

Marginalia Presents: Tr13kaidekaphobia

 

Welcome to Marginalia.

While our stated goal is to keep everyone up to date with the services we provide here at the circulation desk, the general idea is to present that information in a light-hearted, but relevant manner.

With another Friday the 13th on the horizon the staff at Marginalia Presents thought it might be fun to take a quick look at the mystique surrounding the event.

Triskaidekaphobia means a fear, or avoidance, of the number 13. Isador Coriat apparently coined the term in his 1910 book Abnormal Psychology. He also published numerous articles on the subject, and was a founding member of Boston Psychoanalytic Society.

The idea itself has two main points of origin.  In Norse mythology, Loki arrives uninvited at a dinner party for 12 other gods in Valhalla and then tricks the blind god Hoor, a son of Odin and Frigga, into shooting (and subsequently killing) the noble Baldur with a poisoned arrow. However, the most well known version looks to Da Vinci’s late fifteenth century masterpiece The Last Supper with the idea that Judas was the 13th guest.

The number 13 has also been noted for its nonappearance. In some elevators the floor indicator will skip directly from 12 to 14. Many cruise liners do the same thing with their decks, and a few hotels, motels and inns avoid using it altogether.

On the other hand, some people simply dismiss the claim entirely. For example, Dan Marino, a NFL Hall of Fame quarterback, was the last Miami Dolphin player to wear 13 on a jersey before the the team retired the number, in his honour, back in 2003.

With that in mind, let’s switch over to a lucky number and take a look at seven things you can still do in the law library during the pandemic.

  1. Book a study space; email: loandesk@uvic.ca
  2. Re:Quest books and articles
  3. Send a print job: https://libguides.uvic.ca/technicalhelp/printing
  4. Order an Interlibrary Loan
  5. Access the McGill citation guide online (for registered law students via WestLaw)
  6. Tap into research help at lawref@uvic.ca
  7. Get free smiles from your friendly law library staff: anytime@glad to be of service.smile

Bonus Trivia: Did you know that paraskavedekatriaphobia is the term for those of us who have a phobia about Friday the 13th?​

Marginal Presents:

Text: david eugene everard

Editorial assistance and infinite patience: Marisa Lousier and Sarah Miller