Judicial Law and Judges
Le juge et le code : Doré, Viger, comparés
La fonction judiciaire et le recours collectif : Relire H. Patrick Glenn
L’action collective ou le droit privé fantasmagorique
Le pouvoir créatif des juges en droit privé
Introduction : Les silences du Renvoi Relatif à la Réforme du Sénat
One significant set of issues that is left in the penumbra of this Reference is identified explicitly by the Court itself. Early in its opinion, the Court notes that its task is not to address the substance of any proposed reform to the Senate, but to “determine the legal framework for implementing” whatever Canadians and […] Read more
“Retour sur “The Dilemma of Class Action Reform”: l’héritage de H. Patrick Glenn
Ethical Obligations in the post-settlement context

The Canadian Advantage : American Illness and Comparative Civil Procedure
This chapter compares the civil procedure law in the United States with Canada, a country that closely resembles the United States. It reviews the similarities and differences between the two and notes that some of the reforms in Canada can be possible cures for what is termed the “American Illness”. Read more

La structure et le régime des conflits d’intérêts au sein des professions juridiques : réflexions convergentes
Conflicts of interest in the legal profession are often discussed in a binary fashion, addressing separately its manifestations in the context of the solicitor-client relationship and in the requirement that judges be impartial. These two spheres, the public requirement of impartiality and the private obligation to avoid conflict, are seen to have little in common. […] Read more