Reconciliation Syllabus Blog: 2016 Clawbie Runner-up

The Reconciliation Syllabus Blog, established in the summer of 2015 by  UVic Law professor Rebecca Johnson and Associate Dean Gillian Calder, was recently named runner-up for best Canadian law blog in the category of Change and Advocacy.  Writing about the Reconciliation Syllabus blog, the Clawbies noted:

‘We’d be hard-pressed to name a more important and timely conversation in Canadian legal education in 2016 than this one. This collaborative blog is “a Truth & Reconciliation Commision-inspired gathering of materials for teaching law”, where law professors and others reflect on and share concrete examples of how best to respond to TRC Call to Action #28.’

You can read more about the Reconciliation Syllabus blog and the Clawbies on UVic Law’s news and events page.

For more information about the Clawbies and the other 2016 blog winners, check out the Clawbies website.

Congratulations Professors Johnson and Calder!

100th Anniversary of the Migratory Birds Convention Act, S.C 1994 c. 22

What do chickadees, bob-links, coots, oyster catchers, wrens, sandpipers, and auks  have in common?  These birds, backyard, shoreline, urban and wild are all protected by Canada’s Migratory Birds Convention Act, S.C. 1994 c. M-7, an act celebrating its 100th anniversary this year.  The Act protects migratory birds from killing, capturing, taking*, injuring, or molesting.

The Convention between Canada and the United States  was signed in Washington on the 16 of August 1916. It was subsequently  sanctioned, ratified and confirmed in 1917 by an Act of the Parliament of Canada.  The 1917 act was introduced as Bill 92 on June 21, 1917.  The debates at first and subsequent  readings can be read online at the Canadian Parliamentary Historical Resources website.

The Migratory Birds Convention Act has been continuously in force (with revisions) since 1917.  A pdf version of the original Act can be found in HeinOnline, S.C. 1917  c. 18 (7-8 Geo. V.  c. 18).

The current Act (including text of the original convention) and regulations can be viewed at the Canada Justice Laws website , S.C. 1994 c. M-7

The Convention and amendments can also be viewed online at the Canada Treaty Series website; search the Bilateral section.

For a complete listing of protected birds and reference to provincial legislation, see  the Environment Canada website, Legal Protection for Migratory Birds in Canada.  

Planning Ahead to Reduce the Risk of Detrimental Effects to Migratory Birds, and their nest and Eggs.

Related websites:

*see Article II, section 1 and 3 of the Convention for exceptions for taking for food.

250th Anniversary of World’s First Freedom of Information Law

Today marks the 250th anniversary of the world’s first freedom of information law. In 1766 Sweden’s legislature enacted the Freedom of the Print Act which abolished censorship of books and newspapers and required government to provide public access to administrative and judiciary documents.

Information about the 1766 Act, including an English translation of the Act, is available the Swedish National Library’s website: https://frittord250.se/in-english/

Check out a few of the titles on FOI laws in Canada in UVic Libraries’ collection:

  • Government information : the right to information and protection of privacy in Canada – Kris Klein and Denis Kratchanov. Call number: KE5325 K53 2009
  • Access to information and social justice : critical research strategies for journalists, scholars, and activists – edited by Jamie Brownlee and Kevin Walby. Call number: JL86 S43A23
  • National freedom of information audit – Fred Vallance-Jones, Emily Kitagawa. Online
  • Striking the right balance for transparency : recommendations to modernize the Access to Information Act – Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada. Online
  • Brokering access : power, politics, and freedom of information process in Canada – Edited by Mike Larsen and Kevin Walby. Call number: KE5325 B76 2012
  • Fundamentals of privacy and freedom of information in Canada – Michel W. Drapeau, Marc-Aurèle Racicot. Call number: KE5325 D737 2010
  • Access to information legislation in Canada and four other countries – Kristen Douglas. Online.

 

Comment by Professor Donna Greschner on Brexit judgment

As we wrote earlier, on November 3, 2016, judgment in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, [2016] EWHC 2768 was released. We’re pleased to host this guest post by UVic Law Professor Donna Greschner, commenting on the judgment and its importance for Canadian constitutional law:

Canadian constitutional lawyers will find much of interest in the High Court’s decision that the UK government does not have prerogative power to ‘pull the trigger’ on UK membership in the European Union. In the Court’s opinion, since the notice to withdraw from the EU would be irrevocable and thus would irreversibly affect legal rights created by statutes, the power to give notice is held by the body that created the statutory rights: Parliament. Unless Parliament relinquishes its power to the executive, which the Court held Parliament has not done, the power continues to be Parliament’s alone.

In short, the constitutional principle of Parliamentary sovereignty is paramount and must be respected by the executive: “This subordination of the Crown (i.e. the executive government) to law is the foundation of the rule of law in the United Kingdom. It was…..decisively confirmed in the settlement arrived at with the Glorious Revolution in 1688 and has been recognized ever since.” (at para. 26).

With Canada having inherited “a Constitution similar in Principle to that of the United Kingdom,”  to quote the Preamble to our Constitution Act, 1867, the High Court’s understanding of the fundamental principle of Parliamentary sovereignty deserves our close reading, for it is our principle, too. During Stephen Harper’s time as Prime Minister from 2006-2015, executive disrespect of Parliament was common practise. Indeed, disrespect hardened to contempt at least once.

Although the High Court’s decision is already under appeal, its clear affirmation of the principle of Parliamentary sovereignty should stand as an important bulwark for representative democracy in times of troubling accretions of executive power.

 

Judgment in Brexit case: R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the EU

On November 3, 2016, judgment was released in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, [2016] EWHC 2768 (Admin)  (“Miller“). As the style of cause suggests, the question before the High Court addressed the UK government’s decision to exit the European Union, the event commonly known as Brexit (a term not used in the judgment itself).

After reciting the background of UK’s membership in the EU and the process of its decision to leave, the court stated the question before it:

whether, as a matter of the constitutional law of the United Kingdom, the Crown—acting through the executive government of the day—is entitled to use its prerogative powers to give notice under Article 50 for the United Kingdom to cease to be a member of the European Union.

That is, the court was asked to consider the constitutionality of the executive’s use of prerogative powers to implement the EU exit process provided by Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union. The court noted the common ground observation that Brexit “will have profound consequences in terms of changing domestic law” in the UK. (The court emphasized at the outset that it was answering a justiciable question of law; the merits or demerits of withdrawal are matters of government policy and political judgment upon which the court’s decision had no bearing.)

The court concluded the Crown cannot use its prerogative powers to change domestic law, Article 50 notice has this effect, and thus the Secretary of State does not have the prerogative power to give notice under Article 50 as it did without Parliamentary intervention.

To reach its conclusion on the constitutional question, the court in Miller examined, among other matters, the terms of Article 50; the effect of notice; the principles of UK constitutional law, including the sovereignty of Parliament and the Crown’s prerogative power to make and unmake treaties where there is no change to domestic law; the requirement of Parliament’s intervention where treaties confer rights on individuals or deprive them of rights; the domestic effect of EU law in the UK, the constitutional status of the UK’s European Act of 1972 (ECA 1972); the rights arising from EU law and the ECA 1972 and the effect of withdrawal of those rights; other UK legislation relating to the EU; and the advisory nature of the Referendum Act of 2015.

The court noted its entitlement to grant declaratory relief on this justiciable issue; the precise form of its declaratory relief would follow the parties’ receipt of the judgment.

The full judgment and an unofficial summary of the judgment are available on the Miller case site, as are unofficial hearing transcripts.

For information about researching the Treaty on the EU, consult the Treaties and conventions module of the law library’s International Law research guide.

Historical Provincial Statutes – Now Available on HeinOnline

On Tuesday, HeinOnline launched its Provincial Statutes of Canada collection containing the annual and revised statutes of each Canadian province. The collection adds to HeinOnline’s growing collection of Canadian primary materials which includes a complete collection of the Annual Statutes of Canada (1792-2014)  and Revised Statutes of Canada.

While the Provincial Statutes of Canada collection is not complete, the collection will be a benefit to researchers who do not have access to a print collection. Researchers can expect the collection to grow as HeinOnline adds more coverage for each of the provinces in the future.

The collection includes:

British Columbia

  • Annual Statutes of British Columbia (1872-1990)
  • Laws of British Columbia, Consisting of the Acts, Ordinances, & Proclamations of the Formerly Separate Colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia, and of the United Colony of British Columbia (1871)
  • Consolidated Statutes of British Columbia, Consisting of the Acts, Ordinances and Proclamations of the Formerly Separate Colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia (1877)
  • Statutes of British Columbia up to and including the Year 1888
  • Revised Statutes of British Columbia (1897, 1911, 1924, 1936, 1948, 1960, 1979)

Alberta

  • Statutes of Alberta (1906-2015)
  • Revised Statutes of Alberta (1922, 1942, 1955, 1970, 1980, 2000)

Saskatchewan

  • Statutes of the Province of Saskatchewan (1906-1965)
  • Revised Statutes of Saskatchewan (1909, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1953, 1965)

Manitoba

  • Acts of the Legislature of the Province of Manitoba (1871-1965)
  • Consolidated Statutes of Manitoba 1880
  • Revised Statutes of Manitoba (1902, 1913, 1924, 1940, 1954)

Ontario

  • Statutes of Ontario (1867-2014)
  • Revised Statutes of Ontario (1877, 1887, 1897, 1914, 1927, 1937, 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990)

Quebec

  • Statuts de la Province de Quebec (1867- 1965)
  • Revised Acts and Ordinances of Lower-Canada (1845)
  • Consolidated Statutes of Lower Canada (1861)
  • Statuts Refondus de la Province de Quebec (1888, 1909, 1925, 1941, 1964)

New Brunswick

  • Acts of the Province of New Brunswick (1786-1973)
  • Revised Statutes of New Brunswick (1854, 1877, 1903, 1927, 1952, 1973)

Prince Edward Island

  • Acts of the General Assembly of Prince Edward Island (1860-1965)
  • Revised Statutes of Prince Edward Island (1951)
  • Acts of the General Assembly of Prince Edward Island, from the Establishment of the Legislature, in the Thirteenth Year of the Reign of His Late Majesty King George the Third, A.D. 1773, to the Fourth Year of the Reign of His Present Majesty King William (1834)
  • Acts of the General Assembly of Prince Edward Island, from the Establishment of the Legislature, in the Thirteenth Year of the Reign of His Majesty King George the Third, A.D. 1773, to the Seventh Year of the Reign of Her Present Majesty Queen Victoria (1851-1852)
  • Acts of the General Assembly of Prince Edward Island from the Establishment of the Legislature, in the Thirteenth Year of the Reign of His Majesty King George the Third, A.D. 1773 to the Thirty-First Year of the Reign of Her Present Majesty Queen Victoria (1862-1868)
  • Private and Local Acts of the General Assembly of Prince Edward Island (1862-1868)

Nova Scotia

  • Statutes of Nova Scotia (1836-1965)
  • Statutes at Large, Passed in the Several General Assemblies Held in His Majesty’s Province of Nova-Scotia  (1758-1835)
  • Revised Statutes of Nova Scotia (1851, 1859, 1864, 1873, 1884, 1900, 1923, 1954, 1967, 1989)

Newfoundland and Labrador

  • Statutes of Newfoundland (1845-1965)
  • Consolidated Statutes of Newfoundland (1874, 1896, 1919)
  • Revised Statutes of Newfoundland (1952)

Professor Val Napoleon awarded Indigenous Peoples’ Counsel Award

Congratulations to Professor Val Napoleon, who was awarded the Indigenous Peoples’ Counsel designation from the Indigenous Bar Association at this year’s IBA Annual Conference on October 14. The Indigenous Peoples’ Counsel designation is awarded to an Aboriginal lawyer in recognition of outstanding achievements in the practice of law and service to her community and the Creator.

Val is the Law Foundation Chair of Aboriginal Justice and Governance and the Director of the Indigenous Law Research Unit at UVic and is a leading scholar in Indigenous law in Canada.

Check out some of Professor Napoleon’s scholarship held in the UVic Libraries collections:

  • Val Napoleon, “Tsilhqot’in Law of Consent” (2015) 48:3 University of British Columbia Law Review 873.
  • Val Napoleon & Hadley Friedland, “Gathering the Threads: Developing a Methodology for Researching and Rebuilding Indigenous Legal Traditions” (2015) 1:1 Lakehead Law Journal 16.
  • Emily Snyder, Val Napoleon & John Burrows, “Gender and Violence: Drawing on Indigenous Legal Resources” (2015) 48:2 University of British Columbia Law Review 593.
  • Val Napoleon & Hadley Friedland, “Accessing Tully: Political Philosophy for the Everyday and the Everyone” in Robert Nichols & Jakeet Singh, eds, Freedom and Democracy in an Imperial Context: Dialogues with James Tully (New York: Routledge, 2014). Call Number: JC423 F7517 2014
  • Val Napoleon, “Thinking about Indigenous Legal Orders” in René Provost & Colleen Sheppard, eds, Dialogues on Human Rights and Legal Pluralism (New York: Springer, 2013). ELECTRONIC
  • Val Napoleon, “Living Together: Gitksan Legal Reasoning as a Foundation for Consent” in Jeremy Webber & Colin McLeod, eds, Between Consenting Peoples: Political Community and the Meaning of Consent (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2010). Call Number: JC328.2 B465 2010
  • Val Napoleon “Aboriginal Discourse: Gender, Identity and Community” in Benjamin J Richardson, Shin Imai & Kent McNeil, eds, Indigenous Peoples and the Law: Comparative and Critical Perspectives (Oxford: Hart, 2009). Call Number: K3247 I53 2009
  • Catherine Bell & Val Napoleon, eds, First Nations Cultural Heritage and Law: Case Studies, Voices, and Perspectives (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2008). Call Number: E78 C2F57 2008

Congratulations Val!

Deborah Curran named REFBC’s 2016 Land Champion

Congratulations to Professor Deborah Curran who was recently named the Real Estate Foundation of BC’s (REFBC) 2016 Land Champion.

REFBC’s Land Champion is awarded to individuals who demonstrate leadership, innovation and collaboration in sustainable land development and who have made outstanding contributions to the field.

REFBC’s CEO Jack Wong praised Deborah’s work as:

“innovative, cutting-edge and highly practical … Her work on watershed governance and on smart growth has informed decision makers and changed the way we think about development and sustainability.”

You can read REFBC’s full press release here.

Check out some of Deborah’s work in the area of sustainable land use and watershed governance held in the UVic LIbraries collections:

  • Deborah Curran & S. Mascher, “Adaptation in Water Law: Evaluating Australian (New South Wales) and Canadian (British Columbia) Law Reform Initiatives” (forthcoming 2016) 12:1 McGill International Journal of Sustainable Development Law and Policy.
  • Deboarh Curran, “Water Law as a Watershed Endeavor: Federal Inactivity as an Opportunity for Local Initiative” (2015) 28:1 Journal of Environmental Law and Practice 53.
  • Deborah Curran & Oliver M. Brandes, When the Water Dries up: Lessons from the Failure of Water Entitlements in Canada, the U.S. and Australia (Victoria: POLIS Project on Ecological Governance, Water Sustainability Project, 2012) Online.
  • Deborah Curran & Oliver M. Brandes, Water Licences and Conservation: Future Directions for Land Trusts in British Columbia (Victoria: POLIS Project on Ecological Governance, 2009) Online.
  • Deborah Curran, Protecting the Working Landscape of Agriculture: A Smart Growth Direction for Municipalities in British Columbia (Vancouver: West Coast Environmental Law Research Foundation, 2005) Online.
  • Deborah Curran, British Columbia’s Agricultural Land Reserve: A Legal Review of the Question of “Community Need” (Vancouver: Smart Growth BC, 2007). Online.
  • Deborah Curran, A Case for Smart Growth (Vancouver: West Coast Environmental Law, 2003) Call Number: HT243 B74 C87 2003

Congratulations, Dr Carol Liao

Congratulations to UVic Law Assistant Professor Carol Liao, who recently successfully defended her PhD dissertation. Her PhD, achieved jointly with University of Toronto and University of British Columbia, is entitled “For-Profit, Non-Profit, and Hybrid: The Global Emergence of Legally ‘Good’ Corporations and the Canadian Experiment.”

liao-profile

Check out some of Dr Liao’s other scholarship held in the UVic Libraries collections:

And, of course, Professor Liao’s teaching excellence and commitment to student learning was recognized this spring by receipt of the First Year Class Teaching Award.

Congratulations!