LS101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Aboriginal Title, Sûreté Du Québec, Rulemaking

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Private dispute: a kind of dispute characterized by the absence of any initial participation by public authorities: private disputes are settled without any government intervention. Federal courts: composed of a trial division and a court of appeal, can only deal with matters specified in federal statutes. Jurisdiction includes interprovincial and federal-provincial disputes, intellectual property disputes, competition act cases, citizenship appeals, and cases involving crown corporations or departments of the government of canada. Includes tax court of canada, and courts that serve the military justice system. The supreme court of canada: canada"s highest court of law, has jurisdiction over disputes in all areas of law, is the final court of appeal from all other. Participants in court processes: courts are composed of four groups of participants: litigants, lawyers, judges, and juries. Litigant: the disputants in courts; includes individuals, organizations, and government officials who are trying to settle disagreements and to regulate their own behavior and the behavior of others.

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