2023
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Administrative Tribunals in Canada: Constitutional Subordinates or Equal Partners?
Paul Daly September 11, 2023
I have posted a new paper to SSRN, “Administrative Tribunals in Canada: Constitutional Subordinates or Equal Partners“, a chapter in a forthcoming edited collection on Administrative Tribunals in the Common Law World. Here is the abstract: In this Chapter, I explore the tension between two propositions in Canadian public law. On the one hand, administrative […] Read more
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Refreshing the Places Other Frameworks Cannot Reach
Paul Daly September 7, 2023
Heineken once ran an advertising campaign claiming it was the beer that refreshed the parts other beers cannot. As Ian MacKenzie notes in a kind review of A Culture of Justification: Vavilov and the Future of Administrative Law, I think that the framework for judicial review of administrative action set out in Canada (Minister of […] Read more
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Clarity on the Challenges for Systemic Challenges: Canadian Council for Refugees v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2023 SCC 17
Paul Daly September 4, 2023
The Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Canadian Council for Refugees v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2023 SCC 17 sets out some important principles about challenges to government action at the intersection of constitutional and administrative law. On balance, I think the decision limits the potential for systemic challenges to complex statutory and regulatory regimes […] Read more
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Administrative Law & Governance Colloquium 2024
Paul Daly August 31, 2023
The theme for next year’s Administrative Law & Governance Colloquium is “Executive Power”: Executive power has been the site of passionate debate in liberal democracies for many centuries. In recent decades, authority has concentrated in the hands of presidents and prime ministers, with voters increasingly looking to these office holders to give effect to their […] Read more
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The Constitutional Foundations of Judicial Review in Canada
Paul Daly August 29, 2023
Acting for the intervener Canadian Telecommunications Association, I filed a factum in the upcoming Yatar appeal at the Supreme Court of Canada this morning. Here is an extract about the constitutional foundations of judicial review. The factum will be available here in due course, along with all the others. It is useful to set out […] Read more
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Mark Mancini’s Sunday Evening Administrative Review
Paul Daly August 25, 2023
A quick note to congratulate Mark Mancini on reaching 100 issues of his Sunday Evening Administrative Review. The 100th issue features a nice essay by Justice David Stratas on the utility of Mark’s newsletter and the application of the Vavilov framework. Subscribers to the ‘SEAR’ get a weekly digest of important administrative law cases, along […] Read more
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Some Features of Pre-Confederation Judicial Review in Canada
Paul Daly August 23, 2023
The supervisory jurisdiction is a core function of Canada’s superior courts. It cannot be exercised by another body, nor can access to the supervisory jurisdiction be precluded, as this superintending and reforming power has a solid constitutional foundation in s. 96 of the Constitution Act, 1867. (The sweep of these propositions will be in issue […] Read more
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Why is Administrative Law so Complicated? Attitudes to the Administrative State
Paul Daly August 16, 2023
I have uploaded a pre-proof version of the first chapter of A Culture of Justification: Vavilov and the Future of Administrative Law to SSRN: “Why is Administrative Law So Complicated?” Here is a final extract from the chapter: It should be clear from the discussion so far in this Chapter that there is no ‘Constitution’ […] Read more
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Nothing Really Matters? Andrew Green on Judicial Reforms to Administrative Law
Paul Daly August 14, 2023
I should flag a very fun/interesting/depressing paper by Professor Andrew Green (University of Toronto), “How Important are the Groundbreaking Cases in Administrative Law?“: The story of Canadian administrative law could seen as a move towards deference driven by some fundamental decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada. Debates about this move centre around the proper […] Read more
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Why is Administrative Law So Complicated? Complex Concepts
I have uploaded a pre-proof version of the first chapter of A Culture of Justification: Vavilov and the Future of Administrative Law to SSRN: “Why is Administrative Law So Complicated?” Here is an extract: Three concepts have been of central importance to Canadian administrative law in recent decades. One of them – jurisdiction – is […] Read more