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General News

It’s that time of year…

It’s that time of year when you can’t possibly imagine another summary, another all-nighter, another minute of the at-times-crushing weight of expectation that accompanies the exam period. While it’s probably the absolute last thing you want to hear (and have probably heard it a million times already anyway), as somebody who has done it relatively […]

Law and Order: Overthought

I’m sure that pretty much all denizens of law schools have, at some point watched at least one episode of Law and Order (or its many, many spin-offs) and, in all likelihood, groaned at some point. While it’s undeniably entertaining, it is also frequently larded with clichés, improbabilities, bad law, and an overly Manichean outlook. After twenty years and […]

Food and the Law

As a law librarian who also really, really likes to cook, I am always interested when issues regarding food and the law crop up. There has obviously been a surge of awareness, advocacy, and engagement with these issues over the past decade or so, with a host of media attention lavished upon previously unheralded issues […]

What is your verdict on Louis Riel?

November 16 marked the 127th anniversary of the hanging of Louis Riel, a fascinating and important figure in Canada’s, and especially in Manitoba’s, history.  Much has been written about him, the Northwest Rebellion, the creation of the Province of Manitoba, his dealings with the federal government, his mental state and his trial and execution.   The […]

Early English Laws Project

Initiated in 2006, the Early English Laws project aims to produce new editions of all legal codes and treatises produced in England between the reign of Æthelberht of Kent (ca 580-616) and Magna Carta (1215). The project addresses four principal research questions or problems: What are the early English law texts? What do the texts say? What […]

A new take on book “vendors”

As librarians, part of our day-to-day responsibilities involve dealing with vendors who provide resources to us, the library, to pass along to you, the patrons. This is a big business, as anybody who has ever been to a major library conference and seen the impressive displays and salesmanship on offer. This all highlights the impressively […]

Westlaw Litigator

As you may or may not have heard, we are pleased to have added Westlaw’s newest tool – Westlaw Litigator. Litigator is an impressive and powerful platform that covers the field in terms of litigation – from forms to research tools for all areas. While you are always free to muddle through Litigator on your […]

The Senate is Making News

The Globe and Mail reports this morning that the Senate will likely defeat  Bill C-290, An Act to Amend the Criminal Code (Sports Betting), which would allow Canadians to bet on a single sports event.  While it is unusual enough for the Senate not to pass a bill that has passed in the House of […]

Presidential Libraries

Given that the American presidency has been nigh-on-inescapable since the summer in the lead-up to today’s election, it seems only fitting to do a post about one of the most visible post-presidency legacies – the Presidential Library. Although Thomas Jefferson’s library formed the basis for the Library of Congress, the idea of the Presidential Library is […]

Canadian Journal of Human Rights

The first issue of the Canadian Journal of Human Rights has just recently been published. The CJHR is a new academic journal from the Robson Hall Faculty of Law of the University of Manitoba. An interdisciplinary, peer-reviwed journal of human rights law and policy with a national and international scope, it is the first and […]