Mission
Our mission is to equip Canada and its partners with the strategic, legal, and governance tools to safeguard sovereignty and resilience in a world defined by algorithms, data, and digital power.
About
The Balsillie Legal Advisory Centre serves as Canada's premier policy and legal advisory hub for the digital age. Anchored in the School's unique ecosystem of scholars, practitioners, and policy leaders, the Centre unites stakeholders across government, academia, and industry to deliver actionable policy insights at the intersection of international trade law and digital governance.
The Centre operates at the critical convergence of international trade agreements, digital sovereignty, and constitutional law. With the 2026 Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement Review approaching, the Centre is working to ensure that Canada has the legal and strategic expertise necessary to defend its regulatory autonomy in trade negotiations and before international tribunals.
Balsillie Legal Advisory Centre Members
Centre Publications
Allied by Design, Vulnerable by Default: Why a Durable Plurilateral Critical Minerals Agreement Must Address Security, Digital Sovereignty, and Institutional Reliability
Barry Appleton, Ann Fitz-Gerald, and James W. Hinton
Date submitted: March 19, 2026
Submitted to the Office of the United States Trade Representative
Signature Programs
CUSMA Review Support
Delivers timely expertise to civil society and policymakers as Canada prepares for CUSMA 2.0 consultations. Provides rapid-response analysis on trade, sovereignty, and digital governance to ensure Canada enters the 2026 Review with authoritative legal capacity. The Centre is developing original frameworks on the five-level exception architecture within Chapter 19 and the strategic space available to Canada as a negotiating party.
Canadian Trade, Security, and Resilience Advisory System
A sectoral advisory system offering fit-for-purpose insights to Canadian governments. Focused on economic security, resilience, and sovereignty in sectors facing structural exposure to extraterritorial legal instruments, including the U.S. CLOUD Act and CUSMA Chapter 19 digital trade disciplines. The program draws on comparative frameworks from the EU, Brazil, India, and South Africa to inform Canadian regulatory strategy.
BSIA Advisory Practice Initiative
A practice-oriented initiative within the Legal Advisory Centre that serves as a policy and governance advisory hub, supporting governments, international organizations, and industry partners navigating international trade law, digital governance, and algorithmic regulation.
Strategic Impact
- Equip Canada with authoritative expertise to defend sovereignty in international trade and digital governance negotiations.
- Train the next generation of negotiators, lawyers, executives, and civil society leaders in practical governance innovation.
- Shape global rules by offering pluralistic, democratic, and actionable frameworks for governments and intergovernmental organizations.
- Safeguard democracy against disinformation, surveillance overreach, and what scholars have described as algorithmic empire.
- Prepare policy briefs, treaty clauses, and governance frameworks for governments, intergovernmental organizations, and industry partners.
- Deliver simulations, negotiation exercises, and executive short courses to government and policy audiences across Canada and internationally.
Research by Advisory Centre Members
Whose Law Governs Canadian Data? The CLOUD Act, Executive Agreements and Digital Sovereignty
Balsillie Papers Special Report • Barry Appleton
Can X-Road Be Travelled Abroad? Digital Governance Beyond Estonia
Balsillie Case Study No. 25 • Matt Malone
Canada’s Deteriorating AI Position: A Comparative IP Perspective
Balsillie Paper, Vol. 8 No. 3 • James W. Hinton and Fabrice Blais-Savoie
Public Investment, Private Gain: Canada’s Role in the mRNA Vaccine Breakthrough
Balsillie Case Study No. 22 • Natalie Raffoul and Sarah Hamm
Contact Tracing or Constitutional Creep? South Korea’s High-Tech Pandemic Gamble
Balsillie Case Study No. 20 • Barry Appleton
Intellectual Property Policies Set Canada’s and South Korea’s AI Strategies on Diverging Trajectories
Balsillie Case Study No. 17 • James W. Hinton and Fabrice Blais-Savoie
Code Before Clause: Building Canada’s Digital Defences Before Negotiating Trade
Balsillie Paper, Vol. 7 No. 5 • Barry Appleton
Will Canada’s Bill C-8 Impact the Future of EU-Canada Cross-border Data Flows?
Balsillie Paper, Vol. 7 No. 4 • Matt Malone
Artificial Intelligence and New Threat Vectors: Using Scenario Planning for Trend Forecasting
Balsillie Paper, Vol. 5 No. 6 • Ann Fitz-Gerald, Dmytro Chumachenko, Halyna Padalko and Vijay Ganesh
Current Focus
The Centre's immediate research and advisory priority is the 2026 CUSMA Review, the joint review of the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement mandated under Article 34.7. This review process will determine the future architecture of North American trade in goods, services, and data.
The Centre is preparing analysis, treaty clause proposals, and public submissions to inform Canada's negotiating strategy, with particular focus on Chapter 19 digital trade disciplines, Article 32 horizontal exceptions, and the investment chapter's interaction with data governance regulation.