Informed health care consent, aging and dementia: making it happen

January was Alzheimer Awareness Month, making it a great time for the Canadian Centre for Elder Law (CCEL) to launch a new project that seeks to help people living with dementia better understand their right to consent to health care treatment and medication. In collaboration with the Alzheimer Society of B.C., the CCEL is reviewing the law, policy and practice of health care consent, with the ultimate goal of making recommendations for improvements in this area. Read more

Government of Canada Reinstates Court Challenges Program

On February 7, 2017, in a joint news release from the Department of Canadian Heritage and the Department of Justice Canada, the Court Challenges Program (“CCP”) was reinstated.  With an annual budget of $5 million, the goal of the CCP is to “better reflect changes in the Canadian jurisprudence by expanding the scope of eligible rights to sections of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (the “Charter”) relating to fundamental freedoms, democratic rights, life, Read more

CBABC’s Agenda for Justice and BCLI’s Financing Litigation Legal Research Project

On February 1, 2017, the BC Branch of the Canadian Bar Association (CBABC) released its report, An Agenda for Justice (PDF), containing more than 30 recommendations for reform to strengthen and improve access to justice in British Columbia. The report calls for corrective action by the province in four key areas to address issues of both hardship and uncertainty faced by people who engage with the justice system today. Those key areas are: Effective Access Read more

Quick facts about the Uniform Civil Enforcement of Money Judgments Project

This post is part of a series highlighting four projects endorsed in the Agenda for Justice 2017 published by the Canadian Bar Association, BC Branch. To read the other posts in the series click here. About the project BCLI’s Uniform Civil Enforcement of Money Judgments Project: was carried out from 2004 to 2005 and was supported by the Ministry of Justice for British Columbia; built on work carried out by the Uniform Law Conference of Canada Read more

Quick facts about the Reverse Mortgages Project

This post is part of a series highlighting four projects endorsed in the Agenda for Justice 2017 published by the Canadian Bar Association, BC Branch. To read the other posts in the series click here. About the project The Reverse Mortgages Project: was carried out from 2004 to 2006 by BCLI’s division the Canadian Centre for Elder Law; featured a six-month consultation, which included a presentation at the 2005 Canadian Elder Law Conference; culminated in a Read more