Liam McHugh-Russell
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xntl.info
Liam McHugh-Russell
@xntl.info
Canadian law professor. Transnational law, labour regulation, cooperatives and corporate governance, knowledge politics. Currently obsessed with the uses of legal scholarship. Two time dad. Not even a jack of any trades.
There is much in the data being requested by the committee that I think should be provided *in some form*. What I find most troubling is the demand for disagreggated, i.e. individualized data about both applicants and reviewers. Putting all this data into an excel sheet is a privacy nightmare 2/5
November 3, 2025 at 12:49 PM
October 31, 2025 at 12:07 PM
Man this game does not pull its punches
October 29, 2025 at 12:29 AM
October 28, 2025 at 11:19 AM
October 24, 2025 at 2:20 PM
Good time to read Fanon, and Césaire for that matter
October 20, 2025 at 2:36 PM
A not-very-happy Friday thought for all my legal academic peeps
October 17, 2025 at 12:45 PM
I agree that this is one important thing novels and other forms of writing do, but I've come around to Ursula Le Guin's view that long form writing *does things to readers,* that the point of the book is what it does, and what a good book does can't be expressed in terms of what it says
October 13, 2025 at 9:29 PM
Man Adorno really knew what was up with fascists, huh
"According to their own constitution, the he-men would thus be what they are usually presented as in film scripts, masochists."
October 9, 2025 at 11:10 AM
Yeah, amid all the buffoonery and over the top violence, this is the real heart of One Battle After Another
October 8, 2025 at 12:30 PM
On some level 28 Years Later may be dumb. But my god 10 minutes in and the profound care that has been taken with tone, angle, editing it's... well it's not like anything else. Honestly there is a poetry to it that channels Malick.
October 4, 2025 at 1:38 AM
Strong evidence that there is also a Royest Thompson
September 28, 2025 at 2:18 PM
Okay, this one made me laugh out loud. He seems so profoundly unserious. Chotiner keeps asking "how do sleep at night" and Sunstein basically gives the law professor's "that's interesting! On the one hand..."
September 23, 2025 at 5:41 PM
Do people still actually believe this about Thomas?! That Alito is an "extremely careful lawyer?"
September 23, 2025 at 5:37 PM
China now produces 2.5 times the electricity produced by the United States. They contribute fully 1/3 of global electricity production.
September 22, 2025 at 10:24 AM
It's easy to miss given the collapse of the US, but this basic data from @adamtooze.bsky.social, on China's solar growth, would on its own signal a change in the global geographies of power.
September 22, 2025 at 10:24 AM
Here's the tl;dr of my post from today. It...does not look for the Dalhousie board. In other news, boy am I ready to go back to work
September 15, 2025 at 3:13 PM
As I read the act, it requires ten years "in practice." But maybe the jurisprudence or practice is clear that this means practice as a member of the Barreau.
September 15, 2025 at 10:44 AM
A fantastic essay on the reality of working as a flight attendant for Air Canada.
August 22, 2025 at 2:39 PM
Notably, while the government keeps cutting direct funding, it has prevented the university from raising tuition in line with inflation by putting place caps well below inflation. And the province has frozen tuition rates (for local students) for 2025-26

#DalStrike
August 20, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Okay, so provincial grants haven't kept up with costs, but can the province afford to pay more? Yes! Nova Scotia's *real* GDP (i.e. after accounting for inflation) grew by about 20% between 2014 and 2024
August 20, 2025 at 6:11 PM
The change in provincial funding to Dalhousie between 2014 and 2024 is a nominal increase of about 9% but in a drop of about 15% in real terms. To keep up with inflation, the grant today would have to $240 million, not $203.
August 20, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Nova Scotia has very much followed the Canadian pattern of declining university funding

In 2013, provincial funding to Dalhousie was $213 million, including a $187 million operating grant. In 2024, the total was $233, including a $203 million operating grant.

#DalStrike
August 20, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Well there's been a shift in the funding model, right? Universities are getting more money from federal research funds rather than provincial student grants? No again. Research funding fell during that period, too. In fact, it's dropped 25% in real terms since the peak 20 years ago.
#DalStrike
August 20, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Oh sure, per student funding fell but grants are growing in absolute terms, right? Nope. Again, as @alexusherhesa.bsky.social's data shows, domestic student numbers at universities only increased 2% across Canada in 2012-2022, in part because the population declined in terms

#DalStrike
August 20, 2025 at 6:11 PM