Administrative Law Matters| Paul Daly
Administrative Law Matters| Paul Daly
Administrative Law Matters| Paul Daly
Along with Professors Gerard Kennedy (Alberta) and Mark Mancini (TRU), I am organizing a one-day conference in Edmonton on June 19 to mark the fifth anniversary of the Vavilov decision. My contribution for the conference is “The Scope and Meaning of Reasonableness Review after Vavilov“: This paper, written for the fifth anniversary of the Supreme Court of Canada’s seminal […]| Paul Daly
This is an extract from my recent paper on bias (available here): In this section, I will draw a contrast between an Australian decision and one from Canada, again to support my proposition that the law relating to bias is best understood in terms of temporal and spatial proximity. At the centre of the tale […]| Paul Daly
This is an extract from my recent paper on bias (available here): I will consider three Canadian decisions in this section. They each relate to the prior relationship between a decision-maker and a party to a matter. The issue in Committee for Justice and Liberty v. National Energy Board[1] was the perceived lack of […]| Paul Daly
In my factum for the Telus case (noted here), I discussed two ways in which courts can engage in dynamic statutory interpretation. I represented the Canadian Telecommunications Association. I thought it might be helpful to reproduce the relevant portions of the factum here. Commonwealth courts manage the difficult task of applying statutory provisions to changing […]| Paul Daly
In its recent decision in Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights v. Canada (Attorney General), 2025 FCA 82, the Federal Court of Appeal returned to a theme it has mentioned more than once in recent years. What is the posture that an appellate court should take in relation to a first-instance judgment on a judicial review […]| Paul Daly
Administrative Law Matters| Paul Daly