The Saskatchewan Law Review
The Saskatchewan Law Review is one of Canada's oldest and most respected legal periodicals. Since 1936, the Law Review has published scholarly writing on legal topics pertinent to our world, our country, and our province. Authors have included influential judges, such as the Chief Justices of Canada and Saskatchewan, and prominent scholars in many different areas.
The Law Review presents ideas, analysis, and reviews that are useful to the Bench, Bar, and students of law and as a vehicle for examination of the political and social development of law.
Issue 70(2), published in August 2007, included articles on same-sex marriage, post-colonial aboriginal rights and reparations for historical injustice via residential schools. This issue also contained the 2006 Review of Saskatchewan Court of Appeals Decisions by Dwight Newman. The issue also contained an analysis of the judicial legacy of Chief Justice Bayda of the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal on the occasion of his retirement. Issue 71(1) will be published in the Spring of 2008 and will include a collection of papers presented at the Ariel F. Sallows Human Rights Conference.