
Free Vaccines and Lost Privileges
By: Phil Lord Governments are resorting to incentives to put the COVID-19 pandemic behind them. Using Canada as a case study, this article discusses how
The Ottawa Law Review is entirely open access. Issues published since our founding in 1966 are available, for free, to the general public on our website and can be read, downloaded, copied, distributed, printed, or searched without financial, legal, or technical barriers.

By: Phil Lord Governments are resorting to incentives to put the COVID-19 pandemic behind them. Using Canada as a case study, this article discusses how

By: Giovanni Giuga A copyright troll is a plaintiff who seeks damages for infringement upon a copyright it owns, not to be made whole, but

By: Brandon Orct Ontario suffers from an access to civil justice problem. Civil trials in Ontario are chronically delayed and backlogged, while the COVID-19 pandemic

By: Brandon Orct Ontario suffers from an access to civil justice problem. Civil trials in Ontario are chronically delayed and backlogged, while the COVID-19 pandemic

By Jenna Smith For many students in the province of Ontario, it is common to attend a school that is within a public or a Catholic

By Jenna Smith For many students in the province of Ontario, it is common to attend a school that is within a public or a
For this bilingual episode of the Ottawa Law Review podcast, we discuss
immigration and refugee law in Canada and its’ recent developments.

par Lynda Collins I. INTRODUCTION Tant que la réglementation n’autorisera pas les robots conversationnels à pratiquer le droit, nous devrons tous accepter le fait que

By Anne Fontaine* I. INTRODUCTION Recent Aboriginal title cases have raised the question of how trial courts should approach overlapping claims of Aboriginal title.

Par Anubhuti Raje* I. INTRODUCTION En ce qui concerne l’architecture de la justice, la raison reste souvent froide, stable et impassible face au moindre sentiment