Introduction: Seventy-five Years of Legal Education and Scholarship at the 'Modern' Faculty of Law Jutta Brunnée and Christopher Essert 1. A Pragmatist Approach to the Administrative State: A New Interpretation of John Willis's 'three Approaches to Administrative Law' Mariana Mota Prado 2. Richard Charles Bosworth (Dick) Risk: Maker of Canadian Legal History Jim Phillips 3. Multidisciplinary Marty Friedland, Miscarriages of Justice, and the Modern Law School Kent Roach 4. Professor Alan Mewett on Morality and the Criminal Law Brenda Cossman 5. Some Leading Themes in the Contract Scholarship of Stephen Waddams Peter Benson 6. The Law's Own Terms Arthur Ripstein 7. Trebilcock and Trade-offs Edward M Iacobucci 8.
'More Legal Theory Than I Thought': Robert Sharpe and Legal Scholarship Hamish Stewart 9. On Living Federal Lives: Katherine Swinton's The Supreme Court and Canadian Federalism and the Future of Federal Imagination Jean-Christophe Bédard-Rubin 10. Denise Réaume and the Women's Court Of Canada: Feminist Judgment Projects and Rewriting Pierson v Post Angela Fernandez 11. Transforming Spousal Support from the Ground Up: Carol Rogerson and the Development of the Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines Martha Shaffer 12. Individual Freedom and the Supremacy of Law: Alan Brudner on Criminal Justice Malcolm Thorburn 13. Gender Equality, AI, and the Future of Human Rights Anna Su 14. A Rule-of-law Compliant Reading of Section 33: The Continuing Relevance of Lorraine Weinrib's Public Law Scholarship Richard Stacey.