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Archive for May, 2007

Slaw Comments via RSS

I’d like to make a recommendation to all of our Slaw readers…

If you currently enjoy the discussion here at Slaw via RSS, you may also wish to add the comments feed for your feed reader. Some of the best commentary and discussions take place after the original post. Plus, you’ll pick up on the conversations that occur after a post has dropped off the homepage.

And speaking of comments, wouldn’t it would be nice if we all re-dedicated ourselves to leaving more of them? Feeding the discussion, asking for clarification, polite debate, or driving that Steve guy into the . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Remembering Kurt

One of the great pleasures of learning the law when I did was that I came into contact with a very special set of teachers who had escaped from Germany in the Thirties and had come to England or North America to continue the teaching of law.

E. J. Cohn, David Daube, John. G. Fleming, Rudolf Graupner, Max Grünhut, Hermann Kantorowicz, Otto Kahn-Freund, Hersch Lauterpacht, Gerhard Leibholz, Kurt Lipstein, F. A. Mann, Hermann Mannheim, Lassa Oppenheim, Otto Prausnitz, Fritz Pringsheim, Gustav Radbruch, Clive Schmitthoff, Fritz Schulz, Georg Schwarzenberger, Walter Ullmann, Martin Wolff, Hans Kelsen and Wolfgang Friedmann.

I was taught . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Thomson Makes $2.75 Billion More Than It Thought From Sale

The wires are reporting that Thomson Corp. has agreed to sell its educational publishing division to a consortium of private equity funds advised by Apax Partners and OMERS Capital Partners for US$7.75 billion.

That’s a sweet $2.75 Billion more than the value that Thomson had initially placed on its educational publishing, as we reported last year. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

In the Friday Spirit: On Judges and Canadian (Legal) English

There’s a tempest brewing in some parts of the Canadian legal universe on what it means to say that there’s a relationship between condition X and harm Y such that the law will say that X is a cause of Y, and what the legal tests are for determining the existence of that relationship.

My note below deals with aspects of that controversy. As some of you likely know, a chief justice of leading Canadian court recently penned a sentence which contains a phrase that is likely to outlive (for the wrong reasons) much of the rest of the court’s . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Careful With Your MySpace, Facebook and Friendster Pages

Future employers may be looking at them and making assessments of employability based on the content. You are what you blog.

That’s what Michael D. Mann (a litigation associate in the New York office of a major law firm that wishes to remain anonymous) says in a piece on Law.com today: Some Job Hunters Are What They Post.

We know (thanks to the Washington Post) that negative comments about a student – discoverable through a Google search – can affect recruitment.

Be sure to extend your searches on yourself beyond Google and Technorati to incude MySpace, Facebook . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Clearly Preferable

As a young lawyer, I observed the pain that went into a comprehensive revision of the Ontario Rules of Practice. Homenaje a Walter Williston and John Morden.

Now the Burton Awards – the Oscars for Legal Writing – are being awarded for a four year project to rewrite the FRCP. The new rules were approved by the Supreme Court of the United States and sent to Congress on April 30. They are scheduled to take effect on December 1, 2007.

The Rules were drafted in 1937 and while they’ve been changed and supplemented over the years, they have . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Legal Wikis

Legal Wikis Are Bound to Wow You(May 7) not only gives a good overview of wikis in general (what are they?, usefulness/purpose, history, etc), but it also highlights the innovative ways legal professionals are using them.
Some examples:

Death Penalty Wiki – a collaboratively edited log of death penalty cases

IPdailyupdate – daily news stories related to intellectual property law

Lawpedia – aimed at family law attorneys with articles on property division, child custody and prenuptial agreements . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

ULC_ECOMM-L

John Gregory, impressive lawyer and occasional Slawyer, runs an email list (ULC_ECOMM-L) about electronic commerce and allied matters. I think of that list as life in the slower electronic lane, which is not a disparagement, but rather an appreciation of a pre-blogging information technology that was perhaps less in your face (though we’ve all been on email lists that fire entries like Gatling guns). If there were a web interface to go along with it, I’d suggest you take a look. But because there isn’t, let me give you a quick run over the topics broached in the last couple . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Maritime Law Book Wins Hugh Lawford Award for Excellence in Legal Publishing

At this week’s annual conference of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries in Ottawa, the Hugh Lawford Award for Excellence in Legal Publishing was awarded to Maritime Law Book.

Since 1999, the Award has been given by the Association every year to acknowledge the work that is done by publishers to provide the Canadian legal profession with high quality materials for use in understanding and researching the law.

From the announcement:

“Maritime Law Book is a Canadian owned and operated company located in Fredericton, New Brunswick. It started operations in 1969 by publishing Canadian caselaw from jurisdictions not covered

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

Is Canada a Haven for Pirates?

In a post on his blog today, Michael Geist challenges both Warner Bros. and the Globe and Mail’s coverage of the former’s claims about Canada’s contributions to movie piracy. Referring to a story in today’s Globe that indicated that Canada is one of the world’s worst piracy offenders and that Montreal was identified as the world’s no. 1 city for illegal camcording, Geist points out that there is no consistent evidence placing Canada at the top of the camcorder pirate list, as the Warner claim suggests:

According to the MPAA, the world’s leading source of pirated movies is the United

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

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This project has been made possible in part by the Government of Canada | Ce projet a été rendu possible en partie grâce au gouvernement du Canada