The Law of Evidence in Canada


Book Description

Introducing the new edition of Canada's leading work on evidence. Stay up-to-date on evidentiary issues with Sopinka, Lederman & Bryant - The Law of Evidence in Canada, 3rd Edition. Cited as authoritative by appellate courts throughout Canada, it is the only major Canadian treatise with in-depth coverage of both civil and criminal evidence. This new edition includes all significant changes to the law of evidence over the past decade.




Murder, Manslaughter and Infanticide


Book Description

A Law Commission consultation paper 'A new homicide act for England and Wales?' was published as LCCP 177 (ISBN 0117302643) in April 2006.










The Criminal Code of Canada and the Canada Evidence Act as Amended to Date, with Commentaries, Annotations, Forms, Etc., Etc., and an Appendix Containing: the Imperial Criminal Evidence Act, the Imperial Criminal Appeal Act, 1907, the Imperial Foreign Enlistment Act, the Canadian Alien Labor Act, Lord's Day Act, Money Lenders Act, Identification of Criminals Act, Ticket of Leave Act, Fugitive Offenders Act, and Extradition Act, the Extradition Conventions with the United States and a List of Great Britain's Other Extradition Treaties, Etc


Book Description










Charter Justice in Canadian Criminal Law


Book Description

"The fifth edition had to be substantially revised to reflect the impact of recent Supreme Court of Canada bellweather decisions in Grant and the companion decisions in Harrison and Suberu. These decisions require a new approach to the meaning of detention for Charter purposes and to the remedy of exclusion of evidence under section 24(2) of the Charter. Much of the voluminous prior jurisprudence on section 24(2) over the past 27 years relating to the meaning and consequences of conscripting the accused in violation of the Charter is now of little moment. New clarifications and new questions are identified."--Pub. desc.




Coercive Control


Book Description

Drawing on cases, Stark identifies the problems with our current approach to domestic violence, outlines the components of coercive control, and then uses this alternate framework to analyse the cases of battered women charged with criminal offenses directed at their abusers.