Go offline with the Player FM app!
BONUS: Detlor v. Brantford (City) #BCITCollab
Manage episode 321519742 series 2812872
Welcome back to the C O L L A B ZONE!
Today we continue our new series of bonus episodes which we recorded with the help of students from the British Columbia Institute of Technology!
As part of our ongoing engagement with Call to Action #27 of the TRC, we created a series of summaries of key Aboriginal case law decisions so that legal students, practitioners, and the public can further engage and learn about how our Canadian legal system treats Indigenous peoples. Some of these decisions are already available in full in other episodes, others we are still working on releasing as full recordings. We worked on this project with students from the British Columbia Institute of Technology, who generously donated their time to record the summaries for us. We also want to thank the 1492 Windsor Law Coalition who provided the basis for some summaries.
Today we have Detlor v. Brantford (City) a 2013 ONCA Decision. The ONCA addressed whether municipalities can pass by-laws prohibiting protestors from interfering with construction on specific sites and whether injunctions sought in response in opposition to the bylaws were valid.
Link to the full decision: https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2013/2013onca560/2013onca560.html?autocompleteStr=2013%20ONCA%20560&autocompletePos=1
Legal Listening - Where Audio Obiter is Our Thing!
We're now on Patreon! Become a patron, unlock fun bonus content, and support the project here: patreon.com/LegalListening
Check us out at legallistening.com, look for us on CanLii Connects, find us on twitter @legallistening or email us at legallistening@gmail.com
While you're here, check out our team!
Julie Lundy: https://www.julielundyart.com/
Rad & Kel: https://www.radandkell.com/
Remember we're always looking for guest readers to come on the podcast. Have a decision you love? Want to see it recorded? Reach out!
194 episodes
Manage episode 321519742 series 2812872
Welcome back to the C O L L A B ZONE!
Today we continue our new series of bonus episodes which we recorded with the help of students from the British Columbia Institute of Technology!
As part of our ongoing engagement with Call to Action #27 of the TRC, we created a series of summaries of key Aboriginal case law decisions so that legal students, practitioners, and the public can further engage and learn about how our Canadian legal system treats Indigenous peoples. Some of these decisions are already available in full in other episodes, others we are still working on releasing as full recordings. We worked on this project with students from the British Columbia Institute of Technology, who generously donated their time to record the summaries for us. We also want to thank the 1492 Windsor Law Coalition who provided the basis for some summaries.
Today we have Detlor v. Brantford (City) a 2013 ONCA Decision. The ONCA addressed whether municipalities can pass by-laws prohibiting protestors from interfering with construction on specific sites and whether injunctions sought in response in opposition to the bylaws were valid.
Link to the full decision: https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2013/2013onca560/2013onca560.html?autocompleteStr=2013%20ONCA%20560&autocompletePos=1
Legal Listening - Where Audio Obiter is Our Thing!
We're now on Patreon! Become a patron, unlock fun bonus content, and support the project here: patreon.com/LegalListening
Check us out at legallistening.com, look for us on CanLii Connects, find us on twitter @legallistening or email us at legallistening@gmail.com
While you're here, check out our team!
Julie Lundy: https://www.julielundyart.com/
Rad & Kel: https://www.radandkell.com/
Remember we're always looking for guest readers to come on the podcast. Have a decision you love? Want to see it recorded? Reach out!
194 episodes
All episodes
×Welcome to Player FM!
Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.