Beverley McLachlin: The Legacy of a Supreme Court Chief Justice

Front Cover
James Lorimer & Company, Sep 3, 2019 - Biography & Autobiography - 232 pages

As a judge, Beverley McLachlin is known for her unique ability to stand up for the values and beliefs that reflect the best of Canadaand Canadians. As chief justice, she led the way to assisted suicide legislation, greater recognition of aboriginal rights and title, safe injection sites for drug users and many other changes that have had a dramatic impact on Canadian life. Less well known is how she encouraged collegiality within the Supreme Court and led Canadian judges to pay closer attention to real-world information about the issues they are considering.

Her defence of the independence of the court and her own personal integrity when she was attacked by Stephen Harper — an incident discussed and documented in this book — underline her strength of character and integrity.

This book sketches Beverley McLachlin's experiences growing up in rural Alberta, attending university, becoming a lawyer and then a judge. At a time when governments were seeking qualified women for senior positions in Canada's courts, she was selected by politicians, both Liberal and Conservative, to fill progressively higher positions. As leading Canadian writers on the role of the judiciary in Canada, Ian Greene and Peter McCormick offer readers a balanced, informed perspective on her time on the Supreme Court — a role that was remarkable for her prodigious work and the clarity of her decisions.

 

Contents

Introduction
7
1 Early Years
11
2 Edmonton to Vancouver
23
19892000
42
4 To the Centre Chair McLachlin and the Chief Justiceship
67
5 The Historical Impact of the McLachlin Court
84
6 McLachlins Leading Decisions as Chief Justice
111
7 Dissident in Search of Consensus
131
Prime Minister vs Chief Justice
149
9 Footprints in the Sand? Or Handprints in Cement?
169
Acknowledgements
178
Notes
180
Bibliography
219
Index
227
Copyright

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About the author (2019)

IAN GREENE is a University Professor Emeritus at York University, where he has taught public policy and administration since 1985. He was the founding director of York's Masters program in Public Policy, Administration and Law. Greene's most recent book is Honest Politics Now (with David P. Shugarman). He is also the author of The Charter of Rights and Freedoms. He lives in Toronto, Ontario.

PETER McCORMICK has taught at Lakehead University, the University of British Columbia, and the University of Lethbridge. He retired in 2015. He is the author of Supreme at Last. He lives in Lethbridge, Alberta.

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