Canada’s online legal magazine.

Carall Parties in Port of Spain

Today’s Trinidad Express carries news of the activities of CARALL, the Caribbean Association of Law Libraries at its annual meeting at the National Library in Port of Spain.

It’s good to know, because the Carall.org website has gone darkThough judging from the 2004 Report, they’ve been grappling with interesting issues. It used to have interesting comments on the challenges of law librarianship in the Caribbean and the emergence of a distinctly Caribbean jurisprudence.

Celebrating 22 years in existence, CARALL believes the advent of information technology has contributed to the creation of a regional legal library system that is today

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

Recherche Articles « Incontournables » en Droit Privé

Avec un collègue de l’Université de Sherbrooke, Mathieu Devinat, nous nous sommes fixés comme objectif de rechercher les articles de droit privé qui peuvent, qui doivent être qualifiés d’incontournables. Bien conscient que l’exercice est forcément subjectif, il s’agit seulement par le biais d’une page de blogue de tenter d’initier un dialogue sur ces articles qui mériteraient d’être davantage connus. Car au-delà de ce qui est une gageure, une activité d’été, le but se situe ici : l’important sera en effet de contacter et de persuader les éditeurs pour leur demander l’autorisation de les publier en ligne.

Bien que . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Slacking

Holidays Act
R.S., 1985, c. H-5

1. This Act may be cited as the Holidays Act.

2. (1) July 1, not being a Sunday, is a legal holiday and shall be kept and observed as such throughout Canada under the name of “Canada Day”.

(2) When July 1 is a Sunday, July 2 is a legal holiday and shall be kept and observed as such throughout Canada under the name of “Canada Day”.

And Monday, too, pretty much. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

A Remarkable Story on the Roberts’ Court

Even though this is the week when the media are contemplating the wider constitutional implications of the stinging defeat for the Bush administration in the Hamdan case, I cannot recall any end-of-term assessment of a supreme court of appeal similar to today’s NYT. Not merely the lead on the front page, but 2 full pages inside with detailed examinations of the court voting record on the major public law cases.

I found the graphics particularly helpful – one tidbit: Chief Justice Roberts voted with Justice Scalia in all but one case.

It would be nice if the same . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

The Paperless Lawyer-Speaker: Dominic Jaar

Last week, several lawyers from the Office of the Judge-Advocate General converged to Ottawa, at the Government of Canada Conference Center, for a National Retreat on integrated information management. The 3-day retreat opened with a one-hour session on Modern Law Practice led by Dominic Jaar, corporate counsel at Bell Canada. Dominic accepted an earlier invitation posted on slaw.

Dominic treated us with something far better than a vision of a future, modern and paperless lawyer: he simply shared with us how he currently worked and demonstrated his day-to-day practice, including court room practice. From accessing remotely the corporate Practice . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Flash: Books Make Profit!

Revenues in Canada's book publishing industry exceeded $2 billion in 2004, and foreign-controlled companies accounted for almost half of the industry revenues, according to the latest data from a survey of book publishers.In fact, 19 foreign-controlled publishers, who represented less than 6% of all companies surveyed, accounted for 47% of total revenues for the book publishers surveyed in 2004.In total, the 330 book publishers covered by the survey had revenues of more than $2 billion in 2004, up 12.5% from 2000. The 19 foreign-controlled book publishers alone had revenues of $949 million.In terms of revenue from book sales in Canada, the share held by foreign-controlled publishers was even higher. Their revenues from Canadian book sales reached $808 million in 2004, 59% of the total of almost $1.4 billion.Book publishers had a total industry profit of $235 million in 2004, for a profit margin of 10.9%.
Posted in: Miscellaneous

Classification Scheme – All the Small Things

If you are a classification junkie, this will make you salivate: The Collier Classification Scheme for Very Small Objects, a project by Brian Collier.

An attractive, clean and intriguing website design, a very cool classification scheme for things that might have previously been considered “square pegs”. An interesting choice of everyday English instead of Latin for the taxonomy. Don’t miss the introduction, which I found fascinating.

Check out the database of collected and classified very small objects. Don’t you want to collect, classify and contribute one of your own? I’m going to be looking in my library corners . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

The Fate of Canadian News Media

Oh, what will become of Canadian news media?

CanWest announced Wednesday it will be pulling out of its association with Canadian Press. Various articles on Google News indicate that this will take a large chunk out of CP’s budget, but won’t be nearly crippling as the pulling out of Southam Inc. (CanWest’s predecessor) would have at one time been. From the Globe and Mail, June 28, 2006:

In an era when content has become an increasingly valuable media commodity, feeding websites and print, CanWest is concerned it may be giving material to CP that it could otherwise be selling. The

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

The OED Has Spoken

In its latest list of new words added to the OEDVoted Best Book in the English Language by the Weekend Wall Street Journal on 20 May 2006 this week is the word Google, now officially recognized by the official source of linguistic authority.For a dissenting view of the OED’s authoritativeness.

Of course, when you scan through the rest of the list and see the following thirty words, apparently unrecognized, one has to wonder what the criteria of inclusion are.

* amaretto, n.
* brewmaster, n.
* Brillo, n.
* calzone, n.
* catfight, n.
* close-captioning, n.
*

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

Do You IM?

I don’t. Not yet, at least.

But I can ignore a social force (when it has a technological nose cone) for only so long, and it’s been quite a few years now that instant messaging has been around. For all that time, I’ve been like the telephone user who could never understand what email was about: why write when you can call? For me, IM lay in the middle, equidistant betwen email and the telephone, and I couldn’t see the charm of the middle when the extremes were available.

〈parenthesis〉 This has often been my problem, this caroming between poles. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

3li_EnFr_Wordmark_W

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