Canada’s online legal magazine.

AI in the Law School Classroom – My Experiment

Last semester, with increasing agitation in the media about AI’s potential impact on the legal profession, I decided to wade in and show my students a little AI in my law school classroom. The course is Advanced Legal Research.

The Experiment

I gathered up a list of interesting readings on the topic of AI and the legal profession. Many of them pointed to horror stories or emerging policies and guidelines in the area. Later I decided to record my findings in my AI Regulation LibGuide.

I made all of this available in an optional readings folder.

AI Panel Weighs

. . . [more]
Posted in: Education & Training, Technology

Dealing With Sudden Resignations: 5 Tips for the Small Firm Founder

You are in the middle of another busy day of legal practice when your star associate pops their head in your office. “Can I speak to you for a moment?” “Sure,” you say. The next thing you know, the associate is telling you they are resigning from their position and will be gone in four weeks.

This is the reality of the workplace; good associates and staff members move on. Why do people leave? Most often, it is to make a career move that better aligns with their goals. Sometimes, it is also about money. Or it can be because . . . [more]

Posted in: Practice of Law

Monday’s Mix

Each Monday we present brief excerpts of recent posts from five of Canada’s award­-winning legal blogs chosen at random* from more than 80 recent Clawbie winners. In this way we hope to promote their work, with their permission, to as wide an audience as possible.

This week the randomly selected blogs are 1. FACL BC Podcast 2. First Reference 3. The Court 4. Family LLB 5. Double Aspect

FACL BC Podcast
Episode 33: Taking a Break and Throwing Your Own Party with James Hsu

In this episode, James Hsu unveils his unique career journey – transitioning from a litigator to

. . . [more]
Posted in: Monday’s Mix

Summaries Sunday: SOQUIJ

Every week we present the summary of a decision handed down by a Québec court provided to us by SOQUIJ and considered to be of interest to our readers throughout Canada. SOQUIJ is attached to the Québec Department of Justice and collects, analyzes, enriches, and disseminates legal information in Québec.

CONSTITUTIONNEL (DROIT) : La Loi sur la laïcité de l’État est valide au regard du partage constitutionnel des compétences déterminé par la Loi constitutionnelle de 1867; elle ne contrevient ni aux principes non écrits de la Constitution canadienne, ni à l’architecture de celle-ci, ni à quelque loi ou principe . . . [more]

Posted in: Summaries Sunday

2024 New Year Update on US Legal Research

2024 is off to a good start with several online U.S. legal information stories from the Law Library of Congress.

On January 18th, 2024 The Law Library of Congress In Custodia Legis blog posted a blog post by Jennifer Davis on the Anniversary of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act.

“Felix Cohen noted that, “[f]rom the earliest years of the Republic the Indian tribes have been recognized as “distinct, independent political communities’” (Cohen 1941, 122). Despite the early nation-to-nation relations between tribal nations and the United States, self-determination was not codified. After termination policies of . . . [more]

Posted in: Legal Information

Ontario Human Rights Tribunal Keeps Gate Closed to Individual Respondent

Written by Daniel Standing, LL.B., Content Editor, First Reference Inc.

In a succinct interim decision, 2024 HRTO 225 (CanLII), the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario (Tribunal) explained when it might grant an application to expand the list of respondents to a human rights complaint. It’s not as simple as one might think. In this case, the complainant sought to add a former employer as a respondent in his individual, personal capacity, to her sex discrimination complaint. The targeted individual was a majority shareholder and director of the employer. . . . [more]

Posted in: Case Comment, Substantive Law, Substantive Law: Judicial Decisions

Russia’s Rule of Law(lessness) Threatens Advocates Worldwide: A Canadian Case Study

Russia’s persecution of thousands of independent journalists, human rights defenders, anti-war dissenters, and opposition politicians in Russia is well known, especially the arbitrary detention and death of Alexei Navalny. Less well known are Russia’s threats and judicial harassment of people living in other countries – including Canada – for sharing views that dissent from official Russian narratives.

For a seven-month period during 2023 and 2024, a permanent resident of Canada, Maria Kartasheva, found herself in fear of lengthy imprisonment in Russia. A Russian court tried and sentenced her in absentia for her peaceful online advocacy exposing Russia’s war crimes in . . . [more]

Posted in: Justice Issues

Book Review: The Law of Affidavits

Several times each month, we are pleased to republish a recent book review from the Canadian Law Library Review (CLLR). CLLR is the official journal of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries (CALL/ACBD), and its reviews cover both practice-oriented and academic publications related to the law.

The Law of Affidavits. By John Douglas Shields. Toronto: LexisNexis Canada, 2023. 255 p. Includes bibliographic references, table of cases, and index. ISBN 9780433525004 (softcover) $140.00.

Reviewed by Laura Lemmens
Retired Librarian
Edmonton, Alberta

The Law of Affidavits is the first and only text dedicated to evidence and the drafting . . . [more]

Posted in: Thursday Thinkpiece

Admissibility of Surreptitious Recordings in Court

Our lives are increasingly dominated by technology. We communicate by various channels: emails, social media, text messages, WhatsApp, Snapchat, FaceTime, and so forth. But what happens when a litigant obtains evidence by hacking into an account or secretly filming an event? Can this surreptitiously obtained evidence be used?

Although discouraged, sometimes these recordings can be admitted into evidence. It is up to the trial judge to decide whether to exclude the evidence by weighing its prejudicial value against its probative value. (See Fiorito v. Wiggins, 2015 ONCA 729, at para. 22).

In the recent case Chen v. Huang . . . [more]

Posted in: Case Comment

A Second CUSMA Panel on Canada’s Supply Management Regime

Over the last three years we have followed Canada’s ongoing battle to protect and reserve it supply management system for dairy and poultry products in place and negotiated for since the original GATT negotiations concluded in 1947. For the most part these trade disputes have been with the United States before NAFTA and Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) Panels.[1] More recently another of Canada’s trade partners joined the fray – New Zealand.[2] The results were mixed and Canada lost some ground but has been able to preserve its right to maintain and operate its system.

On November 24, 2023,a second . . . [more]

Posted in: Administrative Law

Customer Service in an Age of AI

Customer service is in decline. In my opinion, the problem is worse with large organizations.

I skimmed the surface in my last post “The Robots are Already in Control (Part One)“.

Companies that are primarily internet-based are the worst. One of my major pet peeves is a corporate website that has no phone numbers. For many, at best the customer service phone line is almost unfindable – buried four clicks into the site. I’ve even gone so far as to phone the “company” side of the business (the side that deals with shareholders), because there was no . . . [more]

Posted in: Technology, Technology: Internet

Not a Good Year for Research Integrity

Last year a disheartening record was set for research integrity in scholarly publishing. In 2023, over 10,000 research articles were stamped “retracted” reducing them to ghost research. The previous year the number was short of 6,000, itself a retraction record. Clearly something is amiss in the quiet halls of academe.

When a paper is marked retracted, or rather RETRACTED, on page after page, the journal’s editors and publishers have determined that it has a problem well beyond “correction” or “update.” Corrections, for example, will be issued for a number of Claudine Gay’s articles, as the former Harvard president adds . . . [more]

Posted in: Intellectual Property, Legal Publishing

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