Showing posts with label blawgs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blawgs. Show all posts

Thursday, December 27, 2012

2012 ClawBie Nominations (#ClawBies2012)

'Tis that ClawBie time of year again, and the Canadian legal blogosphere continues to evolve.

I have to be honest. Most of the new Canadian law blogs  I've encountered (and many of the old) are more information-heavy than readable.

Many of these blawgs are really wonderful when they turn up on a Google search of a topic I'm researching, and that is a significant contribution indeed.

Truth be told, however, they are not destination-blogs that I would keep going back to for the sheer joy of reading.

Whether this is ultimately an indictment of the risk-aversion of the corporate law-blog-by-committee or not, I'm not sure.  I'll just note that I don't find all that much interesting about these cookie-cutter blogs.

I've always leaned in the direction of writers with a point of view.

Law Blogger of the Year

It is therefore a no-brainer that Mitchell Kowalski receives my nomination as 2012 blawger of the year.

Whether you agree with him or not, Mitch will always get the discussion going. His ongoing critique of the inertia of the legal profession and its regulators is coupled with his own broad vision as to how we can embrace the challenges ahead.

He makes a key point - client-driven change is here, whether we like it or not, and those who adapt and innovate will be the profession's success stories of the very-near future. Mitch's well-received  book, Avoiding Extinction, released earlier this year, is a good entry-point for the uninitiated.

As a blogger, he's interesting, provocative and engaging.  Most importantly, he is emerging as an important, plain-English voice in Canada's dialogue on the future of the legal profession.

Keep an eye on this guy.

In With the New

Darryl Singer is a new, refreshing voice in the the nation's blawgosphere, and I will gladly nominate him as the ClawBie rookie of the year. His December 12, 2012 post, The Law Society's Misguided Decision, is one of the ballsiest and most personally courageous commentaries I have encountered in my nearly eight years online.  The fact that it provoked a detailed, online response from Law Society Treasurer Thomas Conway is no accident.

Mr. Conway's own Treasurer's Blog is more than worthy of a ClawBie nod, as well. Launched in October 2012, readers will be surprised to find that this is not just  the Law Society "party-line" and announcements  blog. The Treasurer's willingness to take a personal stand on the issues and engage in real debate is truly a breath of fresh air.  It's a must read.

Sarah Cohen's Fertility Law Canada Blog is another new law blog to take notice of.  A fine example of everything a specialized, niche-practice blog should be, there is no better resource online on the cutting-edge and rapidly evolving area of Canadian fertility and reproductive technology law.  As Sarah's online biography states, she "loves what she does - and it shows."

What About Bob?

I was pretty much decided quite some time ago that Bob Tarantino's Entertainment and Media Law Signal would be one of my ClawBie nominees this year.  Articulate, clever, thoughtful, witty and thorough - well, that's Bob Tarantino and that's his blog. He is one of Canada's best.

So I was decided on Bob - until I read Bob's own ClawBie nominations, and, specifically, his nomination of Barry Sookman, who, as Bob points out, has not to date been recognized with a ClawBie.

Barry is a prolific tweeter, blogger, and nationally recognized leader in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Computer, Internet, and e-Commerce Law.  Beyond that, he is a walking encyclopedia of knowledge - the kind of practitioner who can readily quote from memory entire paragraphs from dissenting Supreme Court of Canada opinions.

In a year that saw profound change in Canadian copyright law, Bob and Barry were a pretty effective one-two punch for ongoing updates and analysis.  I will thus nominate them jointly.

The Future

Others have observed an increasing gravitational pull away from law blogs and toward Twitter for online legal dialogue and information.  It's a distinction without a difference, I believe. The two platforms are entirely complimentary, and likely will continue to be.  The blog will remain the better forum for in-depth commentary and analysis, whereas Twitter will reign supreme for quick blasts of  breaking news, opinion and occasional hilarity.

While I've done more tweeting than blogging this past year, that's not carved in stone as the plan for 2013.  There is something to be said for articulating thoughts - and allowing them to evolve - through good, old-fashioned writing.

Time will tell.

But that's it for 2012.  It was a good year that saw the launch of WiseLii, participation in the LSUC Articling Debates, a gig at lawTechCamp, and a number of excellent Toronto Law Blogger meetups.

As I close out this year's blogging, my wish for 2013 is simply this - may next year be the year of technological modernization of Canada's courts.  There is no single more important initiative on the table, in my view, for our regulators, legislators and judiciary.

The absence of electronic filing of court documents imposes huge, unnecessary expense on the nation's litigants.  We can't claim to be serious about enhancing access to justice when our archaic court system still requires human couriers to attend at court in person to file each and every document in a court proceeding - at a cost of $30.00 to $150.00 a pop (depending on court location and time-urgency).

The absence of e-filing adds hundreds of dollars - or more-  in avoidable disbursement costs in every heavily-contested matter and, frankly, is an embarrassment to the administration of justice.

If the courts  and governments can't figure out the perfect system to implement - or pending implementation of such a system once developed - fergawdsake, just allow documents to be emailed to the courts, in lieu of in-person filing.

Happy 2013.
 - Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Toronto Law Office website: www.wiselaw.net

Wednesday, December 05, 2012

2012 Canadian Blog Awards

The 2012 Canadian Blog Awards winners have been announced, and we've been anointed by voters as Canada's Best Law Blog for the year.

Woohoo!

Thanks to everyone who voted for us, from all of us at Wise Law Blog.  While we definitely try not to take the awards thing too seriously, it's a nice honour, and very much appreciated.

Congratulations to all winners, and to Slaw, the law blog category's runner-up (and by several country miles, Canada's most comprehensive online legal rag).

And don't forget - it's 2012 ClawBie season too.
-  Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Toronto Law Office website: www.wiselaw.net

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Meet the Blawgers

Another successful Law Blogger Meetup was held Wednesday night at P.J. O'Brien's Irish Pub in downtown Toronto. While we missed a few familiar faces who weren't able to make it this time, it was great to see quite a few newcomers joining in with this burgeoning community for the first time. Here are a few iPhone photos from the evening:


Back, From Left: Andrew Feldstein, Omar Ha-Redeye, Bob Tarantino, Chris Jaglowitz, Lorraine Fleck, Connie Crosby, Syed Ali Ahmed, Front, From Left: Antonin Pribetic, Dan Pinnington, Monica Goyal, Michael Carabash, Garry Wise, Joel Welsh, Adam Goodman. Also present: Barry Sookman


Many thanks to our server at P.J. O'Brien's, who so nimbly and enthusiastically jumped upon a chair to take the group shots. Special kudos, as well, to Entertainment and Media Law Signal's Bob Tarantino for setting the wheels in motion for this inaugural 2011 episode of Toronto Blawgstravaganza.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Friday, October 22, 2010

Many Thanks to Kevin O'Keefe

...for hosting one of his fabled Beer for Bloggers events last night at downtown Toronto's P.J. O'Brien's Irish Pub.

It was a pleasure to meet LexBlog's Kevin O'Keefe, one of North America's foremost legal marketing gurus, along with a number of Toronto's leading law bloggers and legal marketing professionals, for what proved to be a very informative evening - and an awful lot of fun.

(From Left) Michael Carabash, Dynamic Lawyers; Chris Jaglowitz, Gardiner Miller Arnold; Megan Connolly, Connolly Law; Andrea Krywonis, Gardiner Miller Arnold; Kevin O'Keefe, Lexblog; Omar Ha-Redeye; Lorraine Fleck,Hoffer Adler LLP; Mark C Robbins, Lawyer Locate; Garry J. Wise, Wise Law Office
We'll have a bit of video featuring Kevin's views in the next day or so, so stay tuned (and be warned in advance of the imminent return of OMG! Law Talk).

(Photo credit - Phil Brown)
More here.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

Monday, April 05, 2010

That April Foolin' New York Personal Injury Lawyer

I confess that for a brief moment, I was fooled too.

When our blawger friend, Eric Turkewitz of the New York Personal Injury Attorney Blog announced his appointment last week as "official White House law blogger,“ my instant immediate reaction was 'wow, that's cool - I know that guy!'

Mr. Turkewitz' announcement was unusually (for him) understated, well in keeping with the solemnity of the moment:
Since word is already dribbling out among my friends, I thought I should let you know here: I'm closing down this blog in the next few weeks to start up a new one at the White House as their official law blogger. I'll have the opportunity to both expand the scope of my writing and serve my country at the same time. As blogging gigs go, it doesn't get any better than that.

Here's the back story....

Then, I noticed the date - April 1, 2010 - and like most readers, was fooled no more.

The New York Times Cityroom Blog, however, did not exercise these basic deductive processes, and apparently, kinda-sorta took the bait.

Here's the Times' "correction:"

[Note: an earlier version of this column had an item about a blog post by a personal-injury lawyer, Eric Turkewitz, announcing that he had been appointed the White House law blogger. Blogospheric chatter indicates a high likelihood that this post was an April Fool hoax. Mr. Turkewitz declined to give us a straight answer on this score, so, pending callback from the White House, we've taken the item down.]

Nicely done, Eric.

(I may be seeing you soon.

I'm considering a run for Mayor of New York as a Tea Party candidate).

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Update: April 6, 2010

Some people just can't take a joke: Lawyer Says April Fool’s Joke Was Not an Ethics Violation

- GJW

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Sunday, December 27, 2009

2009 Canada Blawg Awards

It's law blog award season, once more.

Amazing, isn't it, that this time of year is upon us again, so soon?

The good folks at the ClawBies have asked that we narrow our nominees down to three, but, this year, I will resist that temptation (which would require that I overlook too many), and simply name my personal picks for Canada's best law blogs in the categories below.

Hopefully, the ClawBie crew will be able to sort through these selections, too:






  • Knowledge Management Blog Award - tie: Connie Crosby, Canada's "information diva," and Michel-Adrien Sheppard's Library Boy

  • Student Blawgers to Watch Award - All the contributors at Law is Cool

  • Excellence in Legal Marketing Award - Steve Matthews of Stem Legal for numerous contributions, including the ClawBie Awards

  • Policy and Influence Award - Jason Cherniak for Liblogs - not a law blog, per se (although it features many law blogs, including Wise Law Blog*), the Liblogs aggregator is a significant achievement by a Canadian lawyer in social media that is highly worthy of mention.


  • Lifetime Blawger Achievement Award - Professor Simon Fodden for Slaw


  • Canada's Law Blog of the Year - Slaw


Job well done, to all.

As I said in Adrian Lurssen's recent year-end piece at JD Supra:

2009 was the year the legal profession began to truly "get" what social media is all about. An interesting (and largely unanticipated) spin-off of this trend has been the increasing prominence of law bloggers as presenters in accredited CLE programs. In this sense, blawging truly came of age in the last twelve months.

With this in mind, my quick tip for my fellow advocates in 2010: do not underestimate social media as a legitimate springboard for professional opportunity, broadened horizons - and much resulting personal satisfaction.

I've had the pleasure of meeting and collaborating with a number of talented and prolific law bloggers over the last year, including David Canton, Dan Pinnington, Omar Ha-Redeye, Michael Carabash of Dynamic Lawyers Blog, PSW Blog's Pei-Shing Wang, and David Bilinsky, whom I'd like to thank once again for his steady guidance through my own, inaugural CLE.*

It is particularly gratifying to see the gradual development of the Canadian law blog community into a cohesive, and ever-expanding voice in our profession.

There is a wealth of information (not to mention stimulation) to be found at our nation's law blogs.

I hope our readers - within the legal profession and the general public, alike - will take the opportunity to explore some of the excellent writers we've highlighted.

Happy reading.

And, finally, many thanks to my colleagues who were kind enough to include Wise Law Blog in their own lists of year-end mentions.

*("full disclosure")

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Friday, December 04, 2009

LawPRO Magazine's Social Media Issue is Online

LawPRO Magazine devotes much of its issue this month to an in-depth examination of social media's impact on the legal profession, so do take a look. See: Social media: Why, what and how to do it right.

As an added bonus, you will find a nice photo and article about yours very truly inside.

Many thanks to LawPRO's corporate writer/editor Norm MacInnes for the kind mention of Wise Law Blog and his thorough coverage of the increasingly important role played by law blogs and social media, generally, in the modern legal practice.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Saturday, September 12, 2009

Law Blogs, Free Speech and Professional Ethics

A New York Times article today canvasses recent professional discipline decisions flowing from over-the-top online comments by U.S. law bloggers that were held to be improperly critical of the Courts:

“When you become an officer of the court, you lose the full ability to criticize the court,” said Michael Downey, who teaches legal ethics at the Washington University law school.

And with thousands of blogs and so many lawyers online, legal ethics experts say that collisions between the freewheeling ways of the Internet and the tight boundaries of legal discourse are inevitable — whether they result in damaged careers or simply raise eyebrows.

Bottom line - don't refer to a judge as an "Evil, Unfair Witch," as did Florida lawyer Sean Conway, who was fined and reprimanded in April for an online outburst utilizing that phrase.

Or to state it more simply, if a lawyer ought not to make a specific comment in a public speech or debate, he or she ought not to say it online, either.

There is more on this topic, including a look at the applicable provisions of Ontario's Rules of Professional Conduct, in the latter part of my article Untangling Web 2.0 - A Survival Guide for (Modern) Legal Professionals:
The blogger often analyzes and comments upon decisions of Ontario’s courts and Tribunals. A temperate tone in such commentary is appropriate and mandated by this Rule.

While a law blogger may disagree with a particular Court’s ruling, I would suggest he or she has a professional obligation to present a well-reasoned and dignified argument in support of the view taken that expressly avoids any overt or oblique disparagement of the Courts or otherwise undermines the administration of justice.

In raising these points, I am cognizant of a particular Western Canadian writer, whose repeated blog references to certain provincial and federal tribunals as “kangaroo courts” have previously brought these rules to mind.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Thursday, July 02, 2009

Blawg Note: Happy Anniversary, Overlawyered

Congratulations are due to Overlawyered, quite possibly the first law blog, which marked its tenth anniversary yesterday.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Wednesday, February 04, 2009

"Scooped"

The blawger definition of a news scoop:

I got to my RSS feeds before you did...

:)

- Garry J. Wise, Cancun

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Law Blog Award Notes

In yet another "top legal blog" listing, Avvo Blog is now posting Alexa's traffic rankings for the top 300 law blogs.

Among Canada's offerings, our own Wise Law Blog comes in at a not-too-shabby #104. Our friends at Law is Cool are impressive at #82, all as of today's rankings.

And on a related topic (from the better late than never department), the selections for the 2008 CLawBie Awards are up, and we are glad to see the notable quality of the blogs that have been highlighted, many of which are featured daily at our sister site, Wise Law Reader.

Congratulations to this years award recipients, and to Steve Matthews for once again quarterbacking this crowning event of the Canadian law blogger year. Next year, I'm thinking a fancy CLawBie dinner with champagne and tuxedos and evening gowns would be nice ...

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Update: February 5, 2009

I note that the good folks at Slaw now appear as the heavyweight Canadian representative on  Alexa's law blog traffic rank listing. Today Slaw is listed at number 32.  

Well deserved. 

For the statistically-inclined, another ranking service is found at Justia's BlawgSearch. Justia's daily Canadian law blog "popularity" listings are here.  Weekly, monthly and "all time" rankings are also available at the site. 

The site's design has been updated, and now includes RSS headline feeds of recent (but not totally up-to-date) blog posts from the sites listed.  

- GJW

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

The 2008 Canadian Law Blog Awards

The Canadian Law Blog Awards

Steve Matthews, the mastermind behind the Canadian Law Blog Awards, has asked members of our nation's 'blawger' community to help him by proposing our nominees for this year's ClawBie Awards, presented to Canada's top law bloggers.

As a very appreciative recipient of such recognition last year, I want to speak for a moment about the award, itself.

The ClawBies are a different sort of award.

Unlike most other awards, including the Canadian Blog Awards and the current ABA Top 100 Awards, which are essentially crosses between popularity contests and voter-turnout drives, the public does not currently participate directly in the outcome of the ClawBies.

Rather, with Steve's call for nominations, they may be emerging as a straw-vote among law bloggers ourselves.

In this way, the Clawbies may perhaps be seen as the 'Oscars' of the relevant blog awards, to the extent that it is our yet-unnamed and largely-unformed 'academy' that will acknowledge those most deserving of cudos.

Steve's decision to ask the blawger community for nominations this year should represent a next step toward a conscious recognition that Canada's law bloggers do cumulatively represent a voice of increasing relevance within the legal profession and in the eyes of the public.

Influence

No Canadian blogger has more ably demonstrated the influence of our new medium in the greater public discourse than Michael Geist, my first nominee for a 2008 ClawBie.

As a vocal and persuasive critic of ill-conceived copyright reform legislation proposed last year by Stephen Harper's Conservative government, Mr. Geist successfully mobilized grass-roots opposition to the legislation via his law blog, media articles and the social media phenomenon, Facebook.

In the process, however, Mr. Geist emerged as significantly more than an online organizer.

When the dust settled and the impugned copyright bill was ultimately put to pasture in December 2007, it was apparent that Mr. Geist had not only assumed the role of the nation's moral conscience on intellectual property concerns - he essentially became the nation's unofficial Official Opposition on these issues, a role that continues to date.

Consistency

One common thread that runs through the best blogs is exceptionally good writing by commentators who speak their minds fearlessly, utilizing intelligent, challenging and highly entertaining voices that make you wonder what they'll have to say about any new issue as soon as it arises.

Although Law Is Cool is a collective that doesn't have a single, defining voice, I think it generally delivers the goods as Canada's most consistently interesting and entertaining law blog.

With subject matter that ranges wildly from strictly-student concerns to advocacy and politically-partisan treatises, Law is Cool is often first-out-of-the-gate with most legal and political developments of general concern, and is probably the site I click through and read most frequently.

Aside from that, its writers have been called more names by Mark Steyn than I have.

For that, I am eternally appreciative, and I gladly name Law is Cool as my second ClawBie nominee.

Access to Legal Information

The 'blawger' enjoys a special opportunity, apart from other blogs, to bring the law to the people.

It never ceases to amaze me how adept my clients now are at sourcing high-level information about their legal concerns online. As a practitioner I can vouch that answers to my own research questions are often but a click away.

Increasingly, the legal information required by the public and the profession can be found free of charge at the many Canadian law blogs whose raison d'etre is exactly that - to get information "out there."

Lots of law blogs do this well. Hull and Hull's Toronto Estate Law Blog does it best.

With ever-refreshing content in multi-media formats, I can't imagine that there is a better estate law resource in the nation for clients and lawyers alike.

As a trailblazer that sets the standard for providing timely, topic-specific legal information to the public-at-large in various media formats, Hull and Hull has my third nomination for a 2008 ClawBie.

Canada's Law Bloggers

Given the task of naming three nominees, those are mine. But are they really Canada's best law blogs, worthy of mention apart from their many peers?

Not necessarily.

I suppose I cast my votes for Canada's overall best law blogs when I launched Wise Law Reader a few short weeks ago, featuring many of the key writers I follow regularly.

And even so, I haven't finished adding sites.

The Court, Slaw, and Jordan Furlong's Law 21 are among the most frequently-recognized and discussed law blogs in Canada. All three are must-reads.

But comprised largely of academics, legal marketers and legal philosophers, these sites don't always provide the ears-to-the ground immediacy found at practitioner blogs like Stan Rule's Rule of Law, the ICBC Law Blog,  Canadian Privacy Law Blog and the indispensable Cavanaugh Williams Insurance and Litigation News blog, easily Canada's smartest lawyer-to-lawyer case law blog.

Also worthy of mention is Donna Seale's Human Rights in the Workplace, one of the many newer blogs that is becoming an important, contributing voice to Canada's online legal landscape.

It's increasingly tough to consider Canada's legal 'blawgosphere' as a monolithic entity, as there are now so many different types of offerings.

There are practitioner blogs, such as our own, written primarily by practising lawyers. There are academics' blogs and law student blogs.

There are those written by journalists, and those by professionals who provide important support services to the legal profession.

Our common thread is simply that all sites' discussions focus largely on trends in the law and developments in the legal marketplace, as a whole.

Cumulatively, there is a lot of good reading out there. And it keeps getting better.

Congratulations to all on a great year for Canadian law blogs, and our best wishes to Steve Matthews as he begins his 2008 deliberations.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Law Student Humour

Here's a fine bit of law student humour from Omar Ha-Redye of Law Is Cool:

How to Get a Law Job

Dear *,

Thank you for your letter of *. After careful consideration I regret to inform you that I am unable to accept your refusal to offer me employment with your firm. This year I have been particularly fortunate in receiving an unusually large number of rejection letters. With such a varied and promising field of candidates it is impossible for me to accept all refusals.

Despite *’s outstanding qualifications and previous experience in rejecting applicants, I find that your rejection does not meet with my needs at this time. Therefore, I will initiate employment with your firm immediately following graduation. I look forward to seeing you then. Best of luck in rejecting future candidates.

Sincerely,

I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Ha-Redye last week at my favorite, local caffeine dispensary. He penned a few thoughts on the weekend about our discussions.

Suffice to say, we have begun planning some interesting concepts for the fall of '08.

It was my first face-to-face encounter with one of my blogger friends (usually we do our linking online). I hope it will not be the last.

So here's a shout-out to some of my favourite Canadian bloggers - the coffee's on me...

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

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Friday, April 04, 2008

'Blogversary' Special

I'm old enough now that I no longer count birthdays.

So I note with interest, therefore, that as Wise Law Blog approaches its third 'blogversary' tomorrow, I'm actually quite looking forward to marking the big day with something a bit special.

I haven't entirely decided what that will entail, yet. But half the fun of writing this blog is figuring it out as it goes, so why should tomorrow be any different?

Blogging has become a somewhat more serious pastime for me over the last year.

There are many reasons for this. Probably the most influential of these is that nothing motivates like success.

Our readership has grown remarkably. We've participated in a number of important online discussions. Some of our writings are now cross-posted at BAR-eX and included in other significant legal publications.

We've even had a bit of recognition via a Canadian Law Blog Award.

Along the way I've made several new friends.

I've also received a few pieces of hate mail and a couple of physical threats.

No love notes, mind you.

But as I said, I'm old enough now that I don't count my birthdays, so what do I expect?

Having said all this, its somehow nice to have this blogversary to look forward to.

We're three!

(It's been a long time since I was able to say that... )

So stay tuned.

This weekend is our Blogversary Special.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Congratulations

Congratulations to all the Canadian law bloggers who made writer Gerry Blackwell's top ten list, published in this month's edition of Canadian Lawyer magazine.

His picks "in no particular order" (as he put it) are:

Michael Geist · Law21 · Law Firm Web Strategy · eLegal · SLAW · The Bizop News · Toronto Estate Law Blog · Law is Cool · Library Boy · Rule of Law

I regularly read many of these blogs, and they are indeed, fine selections. I'll add the following as more than deserving to be on any list of Canada's best of the best:

Cavanagh Williams · Rob Hyndman · Connie Crosby Law Librarian Blog · Andrew Feldstein's Blawg · Thoughts from a Management Lawyer · Toronto Employment Law Blog · The Court

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Thursday, February 14, 2008

Valentine's Day Special

Valentine's Day is lighting up the law blogs with these fine selections:

And of course, Happy Valentine's Day to all.

UPDATE:

Writer Stephanie Mah of CCH Canadian Law Student e-Monthly adds to our Valentine's Day list with this law firm ad that tries to put the "romance" back in divorce.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Law 21 and Articling for Law Grads in Ontario

Jordan Furlong, lawyer and editor-in-chief of the Canadian Bar Association's National magazine has a new blog, Law21, that came to my attention via Connie Crosby.

How can he miss, with a provocative profile teaser like this?

In the 21st century, the practice of law is shaking loose from its traditional moorings and heading out into uncharted territory. Opportunities abound, but so do pitfalls. Most of the old rules won’t apply anymore, while some will matter more than ever.

Welcome to the new legal profession, powered by collaboration, innovation, and client service. This is your front-row seat.

Mr. Furlong's comprehensive analysis of the Law Society of Upper Canada's current task force review of Ontario's bar admision and articling processes is a must read (Part 2 is here).

On the topic of articling, I'll quickly opine that it is nothing short of nutty to propose an abolition of the articling requirement for law school graduates.

If the primary issue is that articling jobs are hard to find, surely the Law Society brain trust can bang heads with the Attorney-General's office, Ontario's private law firms, the Legal Aid Plan and the various, cash-starved community legal assistance clinics throughout the Province to create numerically unlimited, supervised articling placements (pro-bono or subsidized) that will actually do something about the chronic access to justice difficulties in this Province.

I personally can't imagine where I would have been on day one of my law practice in 1986 absent the benefit of the mentorship I received during my own articles from Douglas Lissaman, Gordon Atlin and Richard Belsito. Twenty-plus years later, I am still influenced by their lessons and very different philosophies.

The practical apprenticeship component of legal training in this Province is not just an anachronistic throwback to a kinder, gentler era - it is a necessary step in preparing new professionals for practice in the real world.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

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Thursday, January 24, 2008

Blawg Bits

Quick links to some of the top stories law blogs are following today:

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

2007 CLawBies Awards

The 2007 Canadian Law Blog Awards have been announced.

And hey - Wise Law Blog is a winner....

Best Practitioner Support Blog - Garry Wise - Year-in and year-out, Garry is one committed law blogger. He offers his opinions on almost everything, and if you do a Google search for Toronto lawyer you’ll see how blogging benefits the online exposure of his practice. If you didn’t read his Starting a law firm post back in February, please do. Garry Wise consistently offers great vision to a lot to solos across the country.

Many thanks to Steve Matthews of Vancouver Law Librarian Blog fame, who is the man behind these awards.

It's a true honour, a total surprise, and greatly appreciated.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

Monday, December 31, 2007

Our Blogroll Has Been Updated

It's an overdue bit of housekeeeping, but I have finally updated our Blogroll. It will continue to be available on this blog's right hand column, below our news feeds.

I'm glad to recommend the list below, a mix of what I consider to be some of the better news, political and legal blogs (and blawgs) in Canada and the U.S.

So, without further fanfare, here it is - our new Blogroll:

CANADIAN BLOGS:
Aidan Maconachy
BigCityLib Strikes Back
Blogging Canadians
Blogs Canada: E-Group
Calgary Grit
Canada, eh?
Cathie from Canada
Cavanagh Williams
Connie Crosby Law Librarian Blog
Engaged Spectator
Lisa Hutch - The Trials
Liblogs
Library Boy
Michael Geist's Blog
Peace, Order and Good Government, Eh
Peterborough Politics
Progressive Bloggers
Red Tory
Rosensweig Writing & Ideas Blog
Rule of Law
Scott's DiaTribes
Section 15
Slaw
The Court
The Galloping Beaver

AMERICAN BLOGS:
ABA Journal Top Stories
Robert Ambrogi's LawSites
America Blog
Andrew Sullivan
Atrios

Balloon Juice
Crooks and Liars

Daily Kos
Digby
Firedoglake
Glen Greenwald
Memeorandum
Overlawyered
PointOfLaw Forum
Seeing the Forest
Settle It Now Negotiation Blog
Talking Points Memo
TalkLeft
Taylor Marsh
The Raw Story
The Volokh Conspiracy
Think Progress
Truthdig
WSJ.com: Law Blog
James Wolcott - Vanity Fair
Wonkette

As always, suggestions are welcome. If you have another blog to recommend, leave us a comment.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE