JP Boyd

From Clicklaw Wikibooks
Revision as of 20:39, 28 March 2013 by Drew Jackson (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


JP Boyd
JP Boyd, Aaron Gordon Daykin Nordlinger
agdnlaw.ca
John-Paul Boyd, the founding author of the Clicklaw Wikibook JP Boyd on Family Law, is a litigator, arbitrator, collaborative practitioner, mediator and parenting coordinator in private practice in Vancouver. John-Paul is a fellow of the International Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers. He has served on the Attorney General's Family Law Act Advisory Group and its predecessor, the Family Relations Act Review Advisory Committee, the editorial board of the Continuing Legal Education Society's Family Practice Manual and the Provincial Court's Family Law Rules Committee. He is the author of JP Boyd on Family Law, a public legal education resource first published in 2001 and its syndicated companion blog, first published in 2008.

John-Paul is a prolific writer and frequent speaker on family law topics, and has presented to the Canadian Bar Association, the Continuing Legal Education Society, the Federation of Law Societies of Canada, the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts, the provincial and superior courts of British Columbia, the Manitoba Court of Queen's Bench and the National Judicial Institute. His work has also appeared in the Lawyers Weekly, the Advocate and the UBC Law Review. He is the author of Obtaining Reliable and Repeatable SSAG Calculations, published by the Department of Justice, and one of the authors of Guide to the New Family Law Act published by the Legal Services Society.

John-Paul has been listed by the peer-reviewed Best Lawyers since 2010 and is a recipient of the CBA's National Pro Bono Service Award, the UBC Law Alumni Association's Outstanding Young Alumnus Award and the CBABC's Harry Rankin, QC Pro Bono Award. In a 2012 report of the BC Public Legal Education and Information Working Group, John-Paul was named as one of the six major providers of public legal education on family law in British Columbia, along with the Legal Services Society, the Canadian Bar Association, the Ministry of Justice, the University of Victoria Law Centre and the Justice Education Society.