Philip Slayton

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Philip Slayton is a Canadian lawyer, academic, and author. He has published several books about law in Canada, including Lawyers Gone Bad: Money, Sex and Madness in Canada’s Legal Profession.

Legal career[edit]

Born in England, Slayton's family emigrated to Canada when he was a child. Slayton studied law at Oxford University as a Manitoba Rhodes Scholar,[1] and later clerked at the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa. He taught at McGill University and was Dean of Law at the University of Western Ontario.[2] He practiced corporate law in Toronto with Blake, Cassels & Graydon from 1983 until his retirement in 2000.

Literary career[edit]

Slayton is the author of Lawyers Gone Bad: Money, Sex and Madness in Canada’s Legal Profession, published in hard cover by Viking Press in 2007,[3] in paperback by Penguin Group in 2008, and as an eBook in 2010. The book was not popular with lawyers[4] or with the Canadian Bar Association.[5] He was featured in a Maclean’s magazine cover story with the headline “Lawyers are Rats”,[6] and the Toronto Star labeled him “Public Enemy #1”.[7] Maclean's noted that his interview "stirred up a great deal of controversy, including condemnation from the Canadian Bar Association, which criticized the article for "tarnish[ing] the reputation of thousands of professionals."[8] Editorials in the National Post panned the book and criticized the Maclean's decision to feature it.[9]

Slayton’s second book, Mighty Judgment: How the Supreme Court of Canada Runs Your Life, was published in hard cover and as an eBook in 2011 by Allen Lane, and as a paperback by Penguin in 2012.

Slayton is also a regular contributor on law-related topics to Canadian magazines and newspapers. In 2008, and again in 2010, he was awarded a Kenneth R. Wilson Memorial Award by the Canadian Business Press for his legal ethics column in Canadian Lawyer Magazine.

Slayton has received a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship and has served as President of the Canadian Rhodes Scholars Foundation and as Governor of Sheridan College. In 1998, Oxford University named him a “Distinguished Friend” of the university. Philip is a member of the Quadrangle Society of Massey College, Toronto, and the City of Toronto Legacy Project Committee, and is president of PEN Canada.

In 2014, Slayton released Bay Street, a mystery novel set in the offices of a large fictional Toronto law firm.[10]

In 2015, Slayton released Mayors Gone Bad, exploring municipal government and issues with leadership provided by mayors in the Canadian system.[11]

In 2020, Slayton released Nothing Left to Lose: An Impolite Report On the State of Freedom in Canada, published by Sutherland House.[12]

Personal life[edit]

Slayton is married to the writer Cynthia Wine. Together they are the founders of the Port Medway Readers' Festival,[13] a summer literary festival on Nova Scotia’s South Shore. Philip and his daughter Gabrielle created a popular YouTube film review segment called “Gab & Dad”, in which they and guests regularly review new releases.

References[edit]

  1. ^ List of Rhodes scholars
  2. ^ "Lawyers: Another conspiracy against the laity?". Canadian Business.
  3. ^ "Philip Slayton launches Lawyers Gone Bad". Quill and Quire.
  4. ^ Gray, Jeff (13 May 2011). "Split Verdict! For the Defence". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  5. ^ "Lawyers are rats? No they aren't ... Wait, yes they are". Globe and Mail.
  6. ^ "Maclean’s 10 most controversial cover stories" Archived 2013-07-03 at the Wayback Machine. Mcleans Magazine.
  7. ^ "Exposé makes lawyer Public Enemy No. 1". Toronto Star.
  8. ^ Lunau, Kate (27 July 2007). "The Macleans.ca Interview: Philip Slayton". Macleans.ca. Archived from the original on 9 February 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  9. ^ "The rats fight back". National Post.
  10. ^ "Books: Bay Street By Philip Slayton". Toronto Star
  11. ^ Mayors Gone Bad Quill and Quire, August 4, 2015
  12. ^ Nothing Left to Lose (Sutherland House)
  13. ^ Port Medway Readers' Festival History

External links[edit]