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"The second edition, written from the perspectives of defence, crown and judiciary, continues to be an essential guide to all offences involving physical abuse, sexual abuse, internet child exploitation (including child luring and child sexual abuse images), child neglect, and child death (including expert medical evidence issues pre- and post-Goudge that relate to the prosecution of such cases). The text explores the special accommodations available to children as witnesses, the assessment of children's evidence, and sentencing in child abuse cases. All chapters are being updated for new law and practice related developments, having particular regard for the inclusion of more case law from outside Ontario. The second edition includes two new chapters: one authored by Kasandra Cronin that deals with defending clients accused of offences against children, and one authored by Hospital for Sick Children forensic social workers Meredith Kirkland-Burke and Janeen Moddejonge on forensic social work, focusing on issues surrounding forensic interviewing protocols, child development, child memory, child trauma, and how crown, defence counsel, and judges can be more effective in their respective roles when dealing with child witnesses."-- Provided by publisher
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"In 2012, a report was prepared for the Uniform Law Conference of Canada Working Group studying the question on Exemptions from Mandatory Minimum Penalties (Dandurand, 2012). The report examined the application of mandatory minimum penalties and reviewed the experience of several jurisdictions where exceptions to, or other forms of relief from, the application of such mandatory minimum penalties had been provided by law. Most specifically, the report presented a brief comparative analysis of legal provisions permitting a court in appropriate circumstances to provide relief from the imposition of certain mandatory minimum penalties where the imposition of such custodial sentences would result in an unjust sentence. The following year, the Uniform Law Conference of Canada (Criminal Section) published its own report on the issue (Uniform Law Conference of Canada, 2013). The present report updates the 2012 study, highlights the application of mandatory minimum penalties and reviews the experience of selected juri
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"International Law: Doctrine, Practice, and Theory is an innovative and unique volume which crosses the traditional boundaries between textbook, casebook, and scholarly monograph. The book is designed primarily as an introduction to the system and substance of international law. It is also a convenient and comprehensive reference work on the most important aspects of this burgeoning field. The book includes introductory materials on the nature, history, and theory of international law from an international relations, as well as a legal, perspective. Carefully selected and edited primary materials — including treaties, UN documents, and cases — take readers to the very sources of the rules and principles that comprise modern international law. Extensive and critical commentary on, and analysis of, these primary materials guide the reader to an understanding of the rules, their strengths and weaknesses, and their place in the international legal system. Descriptions of contemporary real-world situations provide concrete context to the discussion. Remarkable for both its depth and breadth, International Law: Doctrine, Practice, and Theory sets the standard for the study of international law in Canada. It also constitutes an invaluable reference collection for practitioners, judges, and scholars working in this ever-increasingly important area of modern law."-- Provided by publisher.
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"This book provides comprehensive analysis of Canadian corporate law topics. The subjects covered in Volume 1 are foundational in nature: the corporate concept, corporate governance, historic foundations of corporate law, etc."-- Provided by publisher.
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This fourth edition of Commercial Insolvency in Canada continues the practical approach of earlier versions and proceeds from the basic premise that all persons interested in or affected by commercial insolvency are entitled to be treated with respect in the insolvency process and are entitled to participate in the process effectively to pursue their legitimate interests.The first two chapters of the book form the basis of discussion of the position of each group of constituents of the insolvent debtor that follows in subsequent chapters. In the final chapter, readers will find an outline of Canada’s version of the UNCITRAL Model Law for recognizing and giving effect to foreign insolvency proceedings in Canada as well as an analysis of cross-border restructuring proceedings based in Canada. Throughout this treatise, McElcheran strives to focus on insolvency as a whole – rather than discussing the patches in isolation, he describes the overall state of the quilt.
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