CCEL Summer Bulletin: June 2022

2021 had many challenges. We are all happy that it has now come to an end, and we look to 2022 as offering new hope and new opportunity. 2022 marks 25 years since the BCLI first opened its doors in 1997. While so much has changed in the past 25 years, our steady commitment to excellence in law reform continues.

Remembering Dr. Karen Kobayashi

We are very sad to announce the loss of a dear CCEL friend, one of our founding Distinguished Fellows, Dr. Karen Kobayashi. Karen was a professor in the University of Victoria Department of Sociology and Associate Dean (Research and Graduate Studies) of the Faculty of Social Sciences. She was also a research fellow with the Institute on Aging and Lifelong Health at the University of Victoria. Karen cared deeply about social justice and about people. Read more…

Supreme Court of Canada considers the significance of biological ties of parenthood in assessing the best interests of the child

In a decision released late last week, the Supreme Court of Canada commented on the diminishing significance of biological ties of parenthood in determining who a child’s guardian should be. B.J.T. v J.D., 2022 SCC 24, was a case with “a long, complicated history,” which the court summed up in its overview of the proceedings: This appeal concerns a custody dispute over a child who was apprehended at the age of four by the Director Read more…

Meet CCEL Research Assistant Ellen Spannagel

My name is Ellen Spannagel, and I’m currently in my final year as a Bachelor of Civil Law and Juris Doctor candidate at McGill University’s Faculty of Law. I am passionate about work that creatively addresses social inequities and am thrilled to be joining the Canadian Center for Elder Law (CCEL) team as a research student. The CCEL has rich experience in public education and law reform with regards to the rights of aging communities. Read more…

Parentage committee continues discussion of multiparent provisions for children conceived by sexual intercourse

BCLI’s Parentage Law Reform Project Committee held two meetings in May, focusing on continued discussion of whether multiparent configurations should be extended to conception by sexual intercourse. Discussion of this broad issue began in March 2022, and continued at the April 2022 meeting. Setting a number of permissible parents The focus of discussion at the first meeting in May was around whether a cap should be placed on the number of possible parents for such Read more…