Beverley McLachlin was sworn in as the seventeenth Chief Justice of Canada on 7 January 2000. This book focuses on constitutional and administrative law decisions rendered in the first decade of the McLachlin Court. It includes contributions in both English and French from leading scholars who examine the Court's legacy in areas such as federalism, Aboriginal rights, Charter rights such as equality and freedom of association, criminal law, and public international law. The book provides authoritative insight into the many important judgments that helped to define or redefine the Canadian legal landscape in the first decade of the 21st century as well as glimpse into what Canadians might expect from our highest Court in the years ahead.

  • Imprint: Irwin UTP
  • Published: October 2011
  • Pages: 430

Chapters

Foreword
The First Decade of the 21st Century: The Supreme Court of Canada in Context
The Right Honourable Chief Justice of Canada Beverley McLachlin, P.C.
Introduction
The McLachlin Court's First Decade—A Dynamic Time for Public Law
Adam M. Dodek and David A. Wright
Part One: Broad Perspectives
Changing Course or Trimming Sails? The Supreme Court Reconsiders
Thomson Irvine
Les décisions de la juge McLachlin à la Cour suprême du Canada : une analyse statistique comparative
Marie-Claire Belleau, Anik Lamontagne, et Rebecca Johnson
The McLachlin Court and the Promise of Procedural Justice
Part Two: Administrative Law
Part Three: Federalism and Aboriginal Law
Peter C. Oliver
The Reconciliation Doctrine in the McLachlin Court: From a “Final Legal Remedy” to a “Just and Lasting” Process
Constance Macintosh
The Duty to Consult Aboriginal Peoples: Government Approaches to Unresolved Issues
Lori Sterling and Peter Landmann
Part Four: Equality and Fundamental Freedoms
Le poids de l'histoire : les années McLachlin et la liberté de religion
Nathalie Des Rosiers
L'arrêt Kapp : L'interprétation du paragraphe 15(1) de la Charte (enfin) recentrée sur son objet égalitaire de non-discrimination
Daniel Proulx
Collective Bargaining and Freedom of Association: Pondering B.C. Health Services
Thomas Kuttner, Q.C.
Part Five: The Old and the New: Criminal Law and International Law
Criminal Justice in the McLachlin Court: Many More Kudos Than Brickbats
Don Stuart
John H. Currie

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