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Watch the SCC Hearing in Fraser v. Ontario

by David Doorey January 6, 2010
written by David Doorey January 6, 2010

Go to fullsize image    We noted last month that a significant labour law case was being argued before the Supreme Court of Canada in late December.  That case was Fraser v. Ontario (A.G.), which very generally deals with the issue of the scope of the protections offered by Section 2(d) of the Charter (“freedom of association”) as pertaining to collective labour rights.  I have summarized the case in more detail before.
You can watch the argument by following this link, and then clicking the “archived” button under webcast for the Fraser case dated December 17, 2009.  Watching Supreme Court arguments can often be far less exciting than expected, but nevertheless, for those students interested in being lawyers and for people interested in labour law and the Charter in particular, this webcast gives you an opportunity to watch history in the making.  It could be months before the Court issues its decision.

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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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If you missed my ⁦@RMIT⁩ lecture on Tuesday here is the text with a recording to follow … Legislating to Rebuild Worker Power: The Industrial Relations Reforms We Need from the Albanese Labor Government - Labour Law Down Under ⁦⁦@RMITCoBL⁩ https://labourlawdownunder.com.au/?p=1042

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Old law school friend now works as a lawyer in the Office of the JAG. She is doing basic training, getting crazy fit. I wasn’t aware these lawyers must basically go thru basic training.

Imagine if there was a fitness test for labour and employment lawyers?

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TheLawofWorkDavid J. Doorey🇨🇦@TheLawofWork·
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You’ve seen this article?

Adrienne Cuoto, ‘Clothing Exotic Dancers with Collective Bargaining Rights’, 2006 38-1 Ottawa Law Review 37, 2006 CanLIIDocs 63, <https://canlii.ca/t/2913>

ryan white@ryandwhite12

One of my COVID projects has been working on a history of the Canadian Association of Burlesque Entertainers, the only case I am aware of in which dancers sought unionization in Canada - so I will be watching this carefully (it is rare and exciting) https://twitter.com/grimkim/status/1559995539999031297

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