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The Law of Work
Supreme Court of CanadaTransnational LawUnions and Collective BargainingUnited States

Video: ILERA Panel on the Future of Labor Law in Canada & the U.S.

by David Doorey June 19, 2020
written by David Doorey June 19, 2020

The video below (and linked here) was recorded as a plenary session for the ILERA 2020 Conference, which is taking place virtually the week of June 22 at Ryerson University in Toronto. The panel was called “Cross Border Reflections on the Future of the Wagner Model, or Labour Law After the Wagner Model” You can see the entire conference program here.

Panelists were invited to organize their talk around two questions:

  1. What should the future of collective bargaining law look like in US/Canada? [normative]
  2. What is the future of collective bargaining most likelyto look like? [descriptive/predictive]

This panel is chaired by Professor David Doorey of York University and speakers include:

Panelists:

Sharon Block (Harvard Law School) [here is the Clean Slate Project Sharon discusses]

Cynthia Estlund (New York University)

Michael Lynk (Western University)

Catherine Fisk (UC Berkeley)

Charlotte Garden (University of Seattle)

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David Doorey

Professor Doorey is an Associate Professor of Work Law and Industrial Relations at York University. He is Academic Director of Osgoode Hall Law School’s executive LLM Program in Labour and Employment Law and a Senior Research Associate at Harvard Law School’s Labor and Worklife Program. Professor Doorey is a graduate of Osgoode Hall Law School (LL.B., Ph.D), London School of Economics (LLM Labour Law), and the University of Toronto (B.A., M.I.R.).

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David J. Doorey🇨🇦Follow

Law Prof. Talking #labor & #employment #law to the masses. Alpaca ❤️ @YorkUniversity @OsgoodeNews @LSELaw @LWPHarvard @Jacobin @OnLaborBlog https://t.co/5V9r8VPHsh

David J. Doorey🇨🇦
TheLawofWorkDavid J. Doorey🇨🇦@TheLawofWork·
15h

Well, more gravy for employment lawyers to keep arguing this silly point.

The court deciding not to dispose of the main issue everyone wants clarified is one of those matters that is impossible to explain to a non-lawyer. Contrary to normal common sense.

Sean Bawden@SeanBawden

@TheLawofWork Decides not to answer the question everyone wanted it to answer. Resolves appeal on basis of appropriateness using R. 21 to bring motion before the ONSC.

Boo.

Reply on Twitter 1524858398898003968Retweet on Twitter 1524858398898003968Like on Twitter 15248583988980039682Twitter 1524858398898003968
TheLawofWorkDavid J. Doorey🇨🇦@TheLawofWork·
15h

What did OCA decide? I was doing this instead.

Link to decision?

Sean Bawden@SeanBawden

The ONCA's decision in Taylor today is like scratching a lottery ticket that proclaims "winner every time," only to reveal "try again."

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TheLawofWorkDavid J. Doorey🇨🇦@TheLawofWork·
21h

This should be an interesting program, joint program in #climate and #labour offered by U of Toronto and U of Montreal through @CRIMT2013

I’ll be speaking in Toronto on just transitions and the law. Still time to register.

http://www.crimt.net/en/eess2022_programme/

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