Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in Nunavut
If all you have is a hammer everything looks like a nail, but if all you have is a circuit court what happens to the administration of justice? This paper explores the history and contemporary usages of the itinerant ‘circuit court’ in the Canadian Arctic. Presenting the circuit court as a technolo...
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University of Windsor
2018-05-01
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Series: | Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice |
Online Access: | https://wyaj.uwindsor.ca/index.php/wyaj/article/view/5787 |
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doaj-68b73533c5bd436d99f7a3f02449b3e42020-11-25T03:24:03ZengUniversity of WindsorWindsor Yearbook of Access to Justice2561-50172018-05-013510.22329/wyaj.v35i0.5787Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in NunavutDavid Matyas If all you have is a hammer everything looks like a nail, but if all you have is a circuit court what happens to the administration of justice? This paper explores the history and contemporary usages of the itinerant ‘circuit court’ in the Canadian Arctic. Presenting the circuit court as a technology of justice, the paper explores why and how this instrument has been employed and the possibilities it constrains. Looking to the challenges of administering justice in contemporary Nunavut, the paper argues that a different type of technology may be needed: One that facilitates work, rather than exercises control; allows for specialized outcomes in place of compliant results; and that focusses on the growth of justice instead of products that are just. The paper concludes by exploring the local, sedentary, judge-based system of Greenland—steeped in its civilian procedural law—as a compelling alternative technology to the circuit court in Nunavut. https://wyaj.uwindsor.ca/index.php/wyaj/article/view/5787 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
David Matyas |
spellingShingle |
David Matyas Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in Nunavut Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice |
author_facet |
David Matyas |
author_sort |
David Matyas |
title |
Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in Nunavut |
title_short |
Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in Nunavut |
title_full |
Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in Nunavut |
title_fullStr |
Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in Nunavut |
title_full_unstemmed |
Short Circuit: A Failing Technology for Administering Justice in Nunavut |
title_sort |
short circuit: a failing technology for administering justice in nunavut |
publisher |
University of Windsor |
series |
Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice |
issn |
2561-5017 |
publishDate |
2018-05-01 |
description |
If all you have is a hammer everything looks like a nail, but if all you have is a circuit court what happens to the administration of justice? This paper explores the history and contemporary usages of the itinerant ‘circuit court’ in the Canadian Arctic. Presenting the circuit court as a technology of justice, the paper explores why and how this instrument has been employed and the possibilities it constrains. Looking to the challenges of administering justice in contemporary Nunavut, the paper argues that a different type of technology may be needed: One that facilitates work, rather than exercises control; allows for specialized outcomes in place of compliant results; and that focusses on the growth of justice instead of products that are just. The paper concludes by exploring the local, sedentary, judge-based system of Greenland—steeped in its civilian procedural law—as a compelling alternative technology to the circuit court in Nunavut.
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url |
https://wyaj.uwindsor.ca/index.php/wyaj/article/view/5787 |
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