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J.W. (Hans) Mohr fonds
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Legal theory and philosophy part 1

File consists of correspondence between Mohr and Elspeth Latimer regarding Mohr's presentation at a colloquium for social work. File also includes his working notes, a newspaper article and a paper entitled "A response to the Children's Act : a consultation paper," published by the Ministry of Community and Social Services.

Articles

File consists of newspaper and journal articles about Hans Mohr and his work in law, the social sciences and psychiatry.

Allan C. Hutchinson

File consists of articles written by Hutchinson: "Tribal noises"; "Indiana Dworkin and law's empire"; "From speech to democratic dialogue : an opening gambit"; "Democracy and determinacy : an essay on legal interpretation"; "That's just the way it is : Langille on law"; "A poetic champion composes : Unger (not) on ecology and women"; and a book review entitled "The three R's : reading, rorty, radically."

Max Planck institute part 2

File consists of articles, offprints and pamphlets regarding the activities of the Max Planck Institute. File also includes articles written by Hans F. Zacher.

Martin L. Friedland

File consists of articles by Friedland: "The case of Valentine Shortis - yesterday and today" and "R.S. Wright's model criminal code : a forgotten chapter in the history of the criminal law."

F.C. DeCoste

File consists of articles written by DeCoste: "Compulsory arbitration of interest disputes : rational model or social necessity"; "Radical discourse in legal theory : Hart and Dworkin"; "Retrieving positivism : law as bibliolatry"; "Feminist legal literature"; a book review of William Conklin's "Images of a constitution"; and a book review of Richard Devlin's text "Canadian perspectives on legal theory."

Brian Slattery

File consists of articles written by Slattery: "Rights, communities and tradition"; "Are constitutional cases political?"; and "The meaning of a constitution."

Alan Hunt

File consists of articles written by Hunt: "Law as a mode of regulation : a theory of law for new times"; "Marxism, law, legal theory and jurisprudence"; "Rights and social movements : counter - hegemonic strategies"; and "Why did Foucault get law so wrong? Reflections on law, power and sovereignty." Some articles are annotated by Hans Mohr.

Mari Matsuda

File consists of articles written by Matsuda about critical legal studies, law and culture, feminist critiques on theories of justice, legal knowledge, racism and speech, and voices of America.

Correspondence

File consists of correspondence, greeting cards and postcards from friends and colleagues including Paul Roazen, Randall M. Rothbart, T. David Marshall, Opher Levenberg, Murray Rankin, Archie M. Zariski, and Maureen A. Maloney, as well as copies of letters written by Mohr. File also includes a poem entitled "The junction" by Henning von Baue andr a copy of a newspaper article entitled "Kosinski returned the gift of life on his own terms."

Paul Roazen

File consists of articles written by Roazen: "Freud and Lytton Strachey : an uncanny parallel"; "Nietzsche and Freud : two voices from the underground"; "Erik H. Erikson as a teacher"; "Introduction to the transaction edition"; "Privacy and therapy"; "Psychoanalytical ethics: Edoardo Weiss, Freud and Mussolini"; "Jung and anti-semitism"; "The rise and fall of Bruno Bettelheim"; and a review of Hannah S. Decker's book, "Freud, Dora and Vienna 1900." File also includes articles of interest sent by Roazen to Hans Mohr.

Miscellaneous

File consists of a report entitled "The discussion on the legalization of mercy killings in medical and nursing institutions in Nazi Germany from 1938 until 1941," a journal and article.

Marie Andree Bertrand

File consists of correspondence between Hans Mohr and Marie Andree Bertrand, and articles written by Bertrand regarding feminism, sexuality and the law.

Correspondence

File consists of correspondence and greeting cards from friends and colleagues including R. Edward Turner, Pax Wilson, Alan D. Reid, Cyril Greenland, Paul Roazen, A. Kim Campbell, Andrew Young, and J.C. MacPherson, as well as copies of letters written by Mohr.

Correspondence

File consists of correspondence regarding the publishing of Mohr’s manuscript “Post-cartesian transformations: The phenomenology of the broken spirit,” letters discussing Mohr’s involvement in proofreading colleagues’ papers, letters to Harry Arthurs (including a discussion regarding the Quebec separatist movement), an annotated copy of part one of Mohr’s manuscript, “Politics of aesthetics / aesthetics of politics,” a copy of Mohr’s text “Post-cartesian transformations : the cloud of knowing” from the Journal of Political and Social Theory, and a copy of Mohr’s published article “The phenomenology of the broken spirit,” 1981. File also includes a copy of Aubrey Neal’s text “From magrite, the invisible visible,” 1981.

Correspondence

File consists of letters from friends and colleagues regarding the publishing of Mohr’s manuscripts, primarily “The absence of presence / the presence of absence : an inquiry into the question of nothingness,” a copy of Nicholas Tavuchis’s essay “Mea culpa : an essay on apology and reconciliation” and letters between Mohr and Tavuchi.

Correspondence

File consists of correspondence and greeting cards from friends and colleagues including Allan C. Hutchinson, Marilyn L. Pilkington, Brian L. Morris, and Gail Valaskakis, as well as copies of letters written by Mohr. File also includes an article by Robert Glossop entitled "From 'happy days' to 'Murphy Brown' or why I don't really feel post-modern even though nostalgia ain't what it used to be" and copies of newspaper articles sent by colleagues.

Marie Andree Bertrand

File consists of correspondence between Hans Mohr and Marie Andree Bertrand. File also includes articles written by Bertrand regarding feminism, sexuality, colonization, postmodernism and the law.

Rupert

File consists of letters from Rupert Ross regarding personal matters, aboriginal peoples, colonialism, theory and justice. File also includes: copies of newspaper articles with topics such as "Society needs protection too," "Study finds prospects grim for many abused children", "The way the Inuit see justice," and "Justice committee targets poverty"; an article entitled "Restorative justice : the New Zealand youth court: a model for development in other courts?" by F.W.M. McElrea; a report entitled "Traditional justice studies"; an article entitled "Beyond Institutions I"; and a paper entitled "Dueling paradigms? Western criminal justice versus aboriginal community healing" written by Ross.

Todd Dufresne

File consists of an article written by Dufresne and Gary Genosko, "Jones on ice : psychoanalysis and figure skating," and an article written by Dufresne.

Alan Hunt

File consists of articles written by Hunt: "The great masturbation panic and the discourses of moral regulation" and "Compulsion to virtue : societies for reformation of manners and the legal prosecution of vice."

Harry W. Arthurs

File consists of articles written by Arthurs entitled: "Without the law : courts of local and special jurisdiction in nineteenth century England"; "The law giveth : the law taketh away : an agnostic's notes on the rule of law in Canada"; "Law, society and the economy"; "Prometheus unbound : law in the university"; "Climbing Kilimanjaro : ethics for postmodern professionals"; "A lot of knowledge is a dangerous thing : will the legal profession survive the knowledge explosion?"; "The historical chauffeur : university governance in troubled times"; and a book review for E.P. Thompson's "Customs in common : studies in traditional popular culture." Some articles include inscriptions written by Arthurs to Mohr.

Todd Dufresne

File consists of correspondence between Todd Dufresne and Mohr regarding Paul Roazen, publishing a book, personal matters, and reference letters written by Mohr. File also includes a review by Dufresne entitled "Emotion and spirit : questioning the claims," Dufresne's research proposal for a postdoctoral fellowship, and "Freud and his followers, or how psychoanalysis brings out the worst in everyone" by Dufresne.

Harry W. Arthurs

File consists of articles written by Arthurs and annotated by Hans Mohr, entitled: "The new economy and the demise of industrial citizenship"; "Landscape and memory : labour law, legal pluralism and globalization"; "Globalization of the mind : the Canadian state and the end of elite accommodation"; "Changing world-challenging times : lawyering in Canada in the 21st century"; "In the belly of the architect : ruminations on university planning and politics"; "Drowning by numbers : the humanities in university decision making"; "Labour law without the state?"; "Law, legal institutions, and the legal profession in the new economy"; and "Mechanical arts and merchandise : Canadian public administration in the new economy."

Roderick A. MacDonald

File consists of articles written by Macdonald: "Critical legal pluralism as a construction of normativity and the emergence of law"; "Should judges be legal pluralists?"; "The design of constitutions to accommodate linguistic, cultural and ethnic diversity : the Canadian experiment"; "Les vieilles gardes"; "Law and chocolate bunnies"; "... but everyone else is allowed to"; and "Metaphors of multiplicity : civil society, regimes and legal pluralism." Many of the articles are annotated by Hans Mohr. File also consists of correspondence between Macdonald and Mohr regarding the articles and the Law Commission of Canada.

Paul Roazen

File consists of articles written by Roazen about law, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and critiques on legal theorists. File also includes book reviews written by Roazen. Many articles are inscribed to Hans Mohr with messages.

Peter Fitzpatrick

File consists of articles written by Fitzpatrick: "New Europe and old stories : mythology and legality in the European union"; "Relational power and the limits of the law"; "Always more to do: capital punishment and the decomposition of law"; and "Nationalism, racism and the rule of law." File also includes an untitled article about the idea of the nation.

Barry D. Stuart part 2

File consists of parts 6 to 9, conclusion and appendix of Stuart's thesis, "Guiding principles : designing and introducing peacemaking circles."

Correspondence

File consists of correspondence and greeting cards from friends and colleagues including Noel Lyon, Marilouise Kroker from CTheory, Bruce Ryder, Ron Bouchard, and Fergus J. O'Connor, as well as copies of letters written by Mohr. File also includes newspaper articles about Elie Wiesel and book reviews from the Globe and Mail, and an article written in German sent by a colleague.

Harry W. Arthurs

File consists of articles written by Arthurs and annotated by Hans Mohr entitled: "The collective labour law of a global economy"; "Labour law and industrial relations in the global economy"; "Globalization and its discontents"; "Mechanical arts and merchandise : Canadian public administration in the new economy"; "Globalization of the mind : Canadian elites and the restructuring of legal fields"; "The political economy of Canadian legal education"; "Tina x 2 : constitutionalizing neo-conservatism and regional economic integration"; and "The constitution of the new public domain."

Miscellaneous part 1

File consists of reports and articles regarding sentencing and the Young Offender's Act by Mohr and the Church Council on Justice and Corrections.

Miscellaneous

File consists of letters and poems by Bradley Crawford, as well as handwritten school work completed by Mohr in Germany. File also includes: a paper entitled "Dynamics of social progress : considerations on the dynamic changes of social patterns" with a grade and annotations, most likely written by Mohr, and an article entitled "Is this political : the art of Alex Colville" by C.E.S. Franks.

Peter Fitzpatrick

File consists of correspondence and articles written by Fitzpatrick: "The pleasure of parricide" and "The lost temporality of law." File also includes chapters of a book entitled "Position," "Law," "Nationalism," and "Globalism."

Crime and criminal law

File consists of the report, "Offender management and offender programs : briefing material prepared for the Standing Committee on Justice and Solicitor General" prepared by the Offender Policy and Program Development Sector, Correctional Services Canada.

Miscellaneous part 2

File consists of reports and articles regarding sentencing and the Young Offender's Act by Hans Mohr and the Church Council on Justice and Corrections.

Charles David Axelrod part 2

File consists of articles written by Axelrod: "Chapter two : tentatively entitled the bones of Joseph"; "Chapter three : you are my witnesses"; "Chapter three : and the God tested Abraham"; and three other articles with no titles regarding religion.

Roderick A. MacDonald

File consists of articles written by Macdonald: "It's not fair, he hit me first!"; "Is law about issuing orders or making rules?"; "Measure for measure"; "Le droit pedagogue"; "Why is it so difficult to combat elder abuse and, in particular, financial exploitation of the elderly?"; "Perspectives on informal legal relations between languages and law in Europe"; "Perspectives on personal relationships"; "Acts of commission and acts of omission"; "Interrogating inquiries"; and "Lessons of law"; and "Metaphors of multiplicity : civil society, regimes and legal pluralism." Many of the articles are annotated by Hans Mohr. File also consists of correspondence between Macdonald and Mohr regarding the articles and the Law Commission of Canada, as well as a paper prepared for the Law Commission of Canada, "Major issues relating to organized crime : within the context of economic relationships."

Domestic partnerships conference

File consists a conference book with articles on themes such as western legal culture, registered partnerships, religion, private international law and marital rights and obligations by authors such as Thomas Anderson, Christine Davies and Martha Bailey.

Correspondence

File consists of correspondence between Hans Mohr and some of his friends and relatives, such as Marie Andree Bertrand and Shelby Ferris Fitzpatrick. File also contains photographs, greeting cards, and postcards.

Toni

File consists of letters and postcards from Toni Pickard regarding criminal law, language, power, hierarchy, yoga, personal matters, theory, education, training and reading Mohr's articles. File also includes an article by Pickard "Experience as teacher : discovering the politics of law teaching" and a letter from Mohr explaining his thoughts on Catharine A. Mackinnon's article "Feminism."

Harry W. Arthurs

File consists of draft articles written by Arthurs and annotated by Hans Mohr entitled: "What do we think we know about law? The politics of legal knowledge"; "Reinventing labor law for the global economy"; "A new constitution for the public domain : Canadian governance in the wake of globalization, neo-liberalism, regionalism and populism"; "The new constitutionalism and the prospects for the activist state"; "The world turned upside down : are changes in political economy and legal practice transforming legal education and scholarship? Or vice versa?"; "Governance : civil society, the state, the economy"; "Where have you gone, John R. Commons, now that we need you so?"; "Corporate self-regulation : political economy, state regulation and reflexive labour law"; and "Poor Canadian legal education : so near to Wall Street, so far from God."

Robert "Bob" Siemens

File consists of correspondence between Robert "Bob" Siemens regarding personal matters, critiques and suggestions about Mohr's manuscripts written during his retirement, such as 'Idiotic logic' and 'The absence of presence / the presence of absence,' sociology, and humanities. File also includes: a printed online article about the cognitive-psychological study of ayahuasca, philosophy, and a newsletter from the Anabaptist Sociology and Anthropology Association.

Roderick A. MacDonald

File consists of articles written by Macdonald: "Pursuing justice"; "Epistles to apostles"; "By any other name"; "In the beginning was the word"; "Let our future not be behind us : the legal profession in changing times"; "The fridge-door statute"; "The acoustics of accountability : towards well-tempered tribunals"; and "Metaphors of multiplicity : civil society, regimes and legal pluralism." Many of the articles are annotated by Hans Mohr. File also consists of correspondence between Macdonald and Mohr regarding the articles and the Law Commission of Canada.

Hans Mohr's files for professional organizations

Series consists of certificates of appreciation and membership from organizations such as The National Organization of Child Care Worker Associations Inc., The Christian Festival, The Board of Governors of Humber College of Applied Arts and Technology, The Coalition for Gun Control, the Canadian Criminal Justice Association, and a certificate of appreciation from the African National Congress signed by Nelson R. Mandela in 1995. Series includes reports, meeting minutes, research updates, memoranda, notes and articles from organizations such as the Vanier Institute of the Family, the Law Commission of Canada, the Round Table on Citizen Agency, Big Brothers of Canada, and the Church Council on Justice and Corrections, as well as correspondence between officials of the institutions and Mohr. Included in the series is the report, "Restorative justice discussion paper" from 1999, and a signed letter from Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau acknowledging receipt of Mohr's paper, "The politics of the family and the family in politics."

Correspondence

File consists of correspondence from friends and colleagues including Antonio Lamer, Murray Wilson, Ian A. Stuart, Peter W. Hogg, Bob Martens, and M. Louise Marchand, as well as copies of letters written by Mohr. Some letters are written in German. File also includes: an article by Michael Shelden entitled "The road to publication," and an article entitled "Neoliberalism und pornographic: the enemy in my bed."

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