Peter A Allard School of Law

A caring public administration? Revisiting the values of tribunal adjudication for access to administrative justice

Event Description:

Adjudicators at agencies, boards and tribunals play a unique role in public administration. Often appointed for limited terms, they assume powers similar to traditional court judges but do so as employees of the executive branch of government. Making determinations about peoples’ rights and entitlements, they contribute to ensuring an accountable government. Traditionally, impartiality and independence are the key principles that balance the arm’s-length but simultaneously judicial and executive orientation of their position. This view, I argue, conceptualizes administrative adjudication principally through its relationship to political superiors and courts but ignores the people who seek justice. Adjudicators themselves offer a different understanding of this role, emphasizing their links to people who seek justice through tribunals, describing it as, “being empathetic”, “hearing people”, “empowering individuals”, ‘restoring trust in the state”, “healing relationships”, and “being a spokesperson for the society”. This article builds on and contributes to theoretical reflections on administrative justice values and a relational public administration. The underpinning principle of care can enable greater access to tribunals. This argument is based on interviews with former and current adjudicators who have experience in health, residential tenancies, social security, worker’s compensation, human rights, immigration and refugee law in Canada.

Zoom Registration

Speaker:
Sule Tomkinson
Dr. Şule Tomkinson​​​​​

Dr. Şule Tomkinson is an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science at Université Laval. She is currently visiting Peter A. Allard School of Law and the UBC Centre for Migration Studies. Her expertise is in administrative justice, qualitative methodology, and research ethics. Her research is funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, The Fonds de recherche du Québec, The Canadian Foundation for Legal Research, The Quebec Bar Foundation, and The Department of Justice. She is currently writing her first book, called “The Quest for Administrative Justice in Canada” where she empirically examines the values considered at the heart of delivering justice through administrative tribunals in Canada, who defines and implements them and how.


  • Allard School of Law
  • External Organization
  • General Public
  • All Students
  • Alumni
  • Faculty
  • Graduate Students
Peter A. Allard School of Law UBC Crest The official logo of the University of British Columbia. Urgent Message An exclamation mark in a speech bubble. Arrow An arrow indicating direction. Caret A month-view page from a calendar. Caret An arrowhead indicating direction. Contact A page from a rolodex. Facebook The logo for the Facebook social media service. Information The letter 'i' in a circle. Instagram The logo for the Instagram social media service. Instagram An arrow exiting a rectangle. Linkedin The logo for the LinkedIn social media service. Mail An envelope. Minus A minus sign. Telephone An antique telephone. Play A media play button. Plus A plus symbol indicating more or the ability to add. Rss The logo for the Reddit social media service. Rss A symbol with radiating bars indicating an RSS feed. Search A magnifying glass. Twitter The logo for the Twitter social media service. Youtube The logo for the YouTube video sharing service.