HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA | CANADA B3H 4R2 | +1 (902) 494-3495

2nd ANNUAL INNIS CHRISTIE KEYNOTE & INTENSIVE SHORT COURSE IN LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT LAW

KEYNOTE LECTURE: 

Why the Right-Freedom Distinction
Matters to Labour Lawyers

Professor Brian Langille
Innis Christie Visiting Professor
in Labour and Employment Law
Faculty of Law, University of Toronto

Friday, November 4, 2011
4 - 6 pm, rm 105
Weldon Law Building
FREE PUBLIC EVENT

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INTENSIVE SHORT COURSE:

Current Issues in Labour & Employment Law

Professor Brian Langille
Innis Christie Visiting Professor
in Labour and Employment Law
Faculty of Law, University of Toronto

Three specialized legal regimes have governed labour and employment over the last half century: the common law, labour relations statutes for unionized sectors and employment standards codes for nonunionized employees. These have become supplemented by workers compensation legislation, unemployment insurance schemes, regulatory regimes for pensions, occupational health and safety statutes, and the like. Human rights legislation, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, international treaties and supra�national institutions have also had a striking impact on regulation of the workplace.

In addition to these evolving legal parameters, the globalized “new economy” has changed the nature of work and its regulation in a need for what many Europeans term “flexicurity”: flexibility for workers and industries to compete successfully in new markets and security for vulnerable workers and industries as they face challenges under such conditions. Integrated labour markets are becoming a key subject of concern for those promoting balanced economic, social and political development under contemporary conditions for international trade and investment.

This course will explore a constellation of these legal and policy issues, which may vary from year to year in accordance with the focus of the scholar invited to teach the course. The course is intended to reflect broad theoretical yet practical approaches as exemplified by former Dean Innis Christie when he taught these and related subjects at Dalhousie Law School for more than 30 years prior to his untimely death in 2009.

November 1-8, 2011
Schulich School of Law, 6061 University Avenue, Halifax
REGISTRATION DEADLINE: October 11
[registration form]