Canadian Lawyer

May 2020

The most widely read magazine for Canadian lawyers

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www.canadianlawyermag.com 39 Available risk-free for 45 days Online: store.thomsonreuters.ca Call Toll-Free: +1 800 387 5164 In Toronto: 416 609 3800 Print + ProView eBook $155 Softcover + eBook March 2020 approx. 160 pages 978-0-7798-9211-2 Multiple copy discounts available Pricing includes shipping and handling. Price(s) subject to change without notice and subject to applicable taxes. ProView eBook only Order # 42729252 $129 Print only Order # 42706293 $129 At-risk youth. Crime prevention. Community health and safety. Gain the expert insight and guidance you need to protect the right to privacy in support of community intervention with this unique new resource. Integrating Privacy with Community Intervention – A Practitioner's Guide gives you the concrete solutions you need for the collection and sharing of information that respects this fundamental human right. Crime prevention projects illustrate intervention models where privacy issues arise most acutely and shows how they were addressed, helping you apply this knowledge in your own settings. Policymakers and field workers will discover a pathway to develop and implement measures that allow the use of personal information within the confines of privacy law and privacy expectations. New Publication Integrating Privacy with Community Intervention – A Practitioner's Guide Chantal Bernier © 2020 Thomson Reuters Canada Limited TR1009397-NM lives it touches in a province that has been hurting economically for some time. "Our economy here is rather fragile," Cuming says, "and I think taking steps that would elim- inate thousands of jobs should be the last deci- sion in the mind of our government." Cuming and his fellow personal injury lawyers in Alberta are lobbying the govern- ment with that argument. He says he accepts, however, that the case for no-fault insurance might prove more popular. "If you tell your average citizen that they can save a couple of hundred bucks a year on auto insurance, that has a great deal of appeal — until their child gets hit and is paralyzed or until they have a brain injury," he says. Scott Stanley says personal injury lawyers might have dug their own graves in B.C. With ubiquitous personal injury ads that make personal injury lawyers look like "sleazy ambulance chasers," he says, that impacts the public perception of personal injury law and governments have an easy time painting lawyers as villains and no-fault systems remove them from the system. "I hope lawyers in Alberta can be a little bit more proactive," Stanley says. "I really think what moved the needle was the mass prolif- eration of advertising. Every time you go on the internet, you're being bombarded with ads by lawyers. People don't want to see that. "Law societies have limited ability to restrain lawyers from advertising because of Charter issues. But they do have the ability to enforce their own rules. Many of these ads make claims that can't be verified, breaking law society restrictions around advertising. I would encourage the law societies of those jurisdictions [with a tort system] to do what our law society didn't and enforce those rules."

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