Bradley Bryan

Bradley Bryan
Position
Assistant ProfessorFaculty of Law
Contact
bwb@uvic.cawebsite
Credentials

BA(Hons) - UBC (1992), MA - McGill (1995), LLB - UVic (1998), PhD - UC Berkeley (2006), LLM (Taxation) - Allard Hall (2014)

Area of expertise

Taxation law, First Nations taxation

Biography

Dr Bradley Bryan is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria.  He holds a BA (Hons) from U.B.C., an MA from McGill University, an LL.B from the University of Victoria, a PhD from Boalt Hall School of Law (UC Berkeley), and an LL.M (Taxation) from Allard Hall School of Law (U.B.C.).  Brad was called to the Bar of British Columbia in 2000 after serving as a Law Clerk to the Honourable Justices Lance Finch and Douglas Lambert of the BC Court of Appeal in 1998-99, and completing articles with the Sierra Legal Defence Fund (now Ecojustice).   Amidst other endeavours, Brad practiced tax law with Woodward & Company Lawyers LLP, advising First Nations on a variety of tax, financing, and corporate structuring matters.

Brad teaches and carries out research in First Nation fiscal relations, Taxation, Corporate law, Indigenous economic and legal orders, and maintains interests in postcolonialism and legal theory.   Brad has co-authored work on Indigenous business structures and taxation of Indigenous peoples in Arthur Cockfield et al (eds.) Materials on Canadian Income Tax, 16th ed. (Toronto: Carswell, 2020) and Mark Gillen et al (eds.) Business Organizations:  Practice, Theory and Emerging Challenges, 2nd ed. (Toronto: Emond Montgomery, 2018), and his publications include “Legality Against Orality: How the Legal Record Hides the Truth of Indigenous Oral Traditions” (2013) 9:2 Journal of Law, Culture, and the Humanities 261, and “Property as Ontology:  On Aboriginal and English Conceptions of Ownership” (2000) 13:1 Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 3.  Brad's research is more fully represented via Brad's Orcid ID, and can be found in the University of Victoria's digital works repository.