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Heenan Blaikie: The Making and Unmaking of a Great Canadian Law Firm: Law and Society

Autor Adam Dodek
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 noi 2024
Uncovers the complicated history of Canadian law firm Heenan Blaikie.

In 1973, three young lawyers established Heenan Blaikie. It would become one of Canada’s highest-profile law firms, counting former prime ministers, premiers, and Supreme Court justices in its ranks. It was like a family, according to many who worked there. But it was a dysfunctional family. In 2014, the firm’s dramatic collapse became front-page news.

Based on extensive interviews with firm lawyers and legal industry insiders, Heenan Blaikie is the story of a respected law firm that ultimately buckled under weak governance and management. The firm seemed to punch above its weight: bilingual, humane, and national with international aspirations. However, hidden beneath its façade of a kind, inclusive culture were accounts of workplace bullying, challenges for women and other minorities, and sexual harassment. In Heenan Blaikie, Adam Dodek, an unbiased outsider, situates the firm’s evolution within the context of a changing legal profession and society, producing an account that is gripping from beginning to end.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780774870733
ISBN-10: 0774870737
Pagini: 396
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: University of British Columbia Press
Colecția University of British Columbia Press
Seria Law and Society


Notă biografică

Adam Dodek is professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa. He is the author of In Search of the Ethical Lawyer; The Canadian Constitution, Third Edition; and Solicitor–Client Privilege. He is also a director of the Canadian Association for Legal Ethics and the Canadian Legal Information Institute and a past governor of the Law Commission of Ontario.

Cuprins

Preface
Prologue: What a Party!
Foundations
1 The Handshake: Creating a New Law Firm
2 Building a Law Firm: The First Decade in Montreal
3 The Game Changer: Pierre Trudeau Comes on Board
4 “A Different Kind of Law Firm”: Creating a Unique Culture
5 On the Verge: A Law Firm Seeking to Go Where?
6 Launching Toronto: Moving to the Centre of the Universe
7 Joe Groia: An Outsider among Outsiders
8 Toronto in the 1990s: Building an Office, Building a Brand
9 The Culture Crystallizes: “A Kinder, Gentler Law Firm”
10 Not Torys? Struggling to Define an Identity and a Vision
Erosion
11 The Donaldson Interlude: Everyone Deserves a Second Chance
12 The Lure of Growth: Becoming a National Law Firm
13 The Critical Years: 1993–98
14 The New Millennium: The Culture Begins to Fray
15 A “Hotel for Lawyers”: Law Firm Partnerships
16 “A Family Business”: Governance and Management
17 Bigger than the Firm: Marcel Aubut
18 The Persistence of White Male Power: Women and Diversity in Big Law
19 The End of the Decade: End of the Dream
Collapse
20 The Money Wells Dry Up: Castor Holdings and Atomic Energy
21 We’ll Always Have Paris: International Follies
22 Lawyers, Guns, and Money: African Misadventures
23 Double Trouble: Botched Succession
24 Quicksand and Crisis: Coffee and Kleenex
25 Implosion: The Final Weeks
26 Cleaning Up: When a Law Firm Fails
Conclusion
Notes; Selected Bibliography; Index

Recenzii

"I had trouble putting Adam Dodek’s book down. It is a compelling and informative read, probably the first of its kind to carefully document and critically analyze the evolution of a law firm from its origin to its eventual collapse."

"Dodek has written a very lively and readable book, full of large and colorful personalities, pithy quotations, and dramatic incident. But it does not just tell a fascinating and somewhat tragic story – it is also full of analysis of the deficiencies of governance and management that were longstanding at Heenan Blaikie but that became especially problematic after the mushroom growth of the firm in the 1990s and later."

"Adam Dodek tells the story of the people of Heenan Blaikie in the context of the evolution of Canadian law firms and the practice of law. The making and unmaking of Heenans provides a cautionary tale of the collision between often laudable personal goals, incoherent collective strategy and governance, and market realities. This is an interesting and instructive account."