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         Canadian Constitution:     more books (100)
  1. Canadian Constitution Historical by REESOR, 1993-06-01
  2. Reshaping Confederation: The 1982 Reform of the Canadian Constitution. by Paul Davenport, 1984
  3. The Courts ; the Canadian Constitution: A Selection of Essays by W.R. Lederman, 1967
  4. A Practical Guide to the New Canadian Constitution: The Law of Your Land by J. Stuart Langford, 1982-06
  5. The Canadian Constitution by David Milne, 1989-01-01
  6. Parliament and democracy in the 21st century: the crown and the constitution.: An article from: Canadian Parliamentary Review by Paul Benoit, 2002-06-22
  7. Canadian Order of Foresters:Constitution by 1920
  8. New Perspectives on the Canadian Constitutional Debate/Le Debat Sur LA Constitution Canadienne: Nouvelles Perspectives
  9. Essays on the Constitution. : Aspects of Canadian Law and Politics. by Frank R. Scott, 1977
  10. The Canadian and American Constitutions in Comparative Perspective
  11. Canadian Constitutional Conventions: The Marriage of Law and Politics by Andrew Heard, 1991-04-04
  12. Canadian constitutional law: Cases, notes and materials on the distribution and limitation of legislative powers under the constitution of Canada (Canadian legal casebook series) by John D Whyte, 1977
  13. Aboriginal Tenure in the Constitution of Canada. (Book Reviews/Recensions). (book review): An article from: Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal by James S. Frideres, 2000-06-22
  14. Chretien and Canadian Federalism: Politics and the Constitution, 1993-2003 by Edward McWhinney, 2003-09

41. Courts And The Canadian Constitution, The
Title. Print this page, The Courts and the canadian constitution. WR Lederman.Carleton University Press. Carleton Library Series 16.
http://www.mqup.mcgill.ca/book.php?bookid=334

42. Liens Utiles Sur Internet, Sites De Références
You are in the following category canadian constitution Communications, Education,Politics, Terrorism. canadian constitution, Government, Countries, Suggest a site.
http://www.imaginaweb.com/eng/ind_con.html
You are in the following category : Canadian Constitution Click on one of the categories to visualize the sites. Actuality Cultural Justice Consumer protection ... Ressources Canadian Constitution
HOME SERVICES PORTFOLIO ... CONTACT US

43. CJPS/Rcsp : Bagehot, The Crown And The Canadian Constitution
Translate this page ABSTRACT / RÉSUMÉ. Bagehot, the Crown and the canadian constitution.DAVID E. SMITH. Abstract Through his writings, Walter Bagehot
http://www.wlu.ca/~wwwpress/jrls/cjps/issues/28_4/smith.html
Canadian Journal of Political Science
Revue canadienne de science politique
XXVIII: 4, 1995
Bagehot, the Crown and the Canadian Constitution DAVID E. SMITH Abstract:
Through his writings, Walter Bagehot gave order and meaning to the institutions of parliamentary government. The English Constitution (1867) acknowledges the Crown as centrepiece but relegates it to the category of symbol. Institutions, Bagehot said, were ``dignified'' or ``efficient'' according to their constitutional function, and the Crown was the apotheosis of a dignified element. By contrast, the author argues that the Crown is an integral part of a practical form of government in Canada, and advances as proof three areas of Crown influence: representation, information and participation. The discussion concludes by noting the relevance of the Crown for the study of Canadian federalism.
The English Constitution

44. CJPS/Rcsp : Conflict Of Interest And The Canadian Constitution: An Analysis Of C
Translate this page ABSTRACT / RÉSUMÉ. Conflict of Interest and the canadian constitution An Analysisof Conflict of Interest Rules for Canadian Cabinet Ministers. IAN GREENE.
http://www.wlu.ca/~wwwpress/jrls/cjps/issues/23_2/Greene.html
Canadian Journal of Political Science
Revue canadienne de science politique
XXIII: 2, 1990
Conflict of Interest and the Canadian Constitution: An Analysis of Conflict of Interest Rules for Canadian Cabinet Ministers IAN GREENE Abstract:

45. Constitution Of Canada - InformationBlast
of the British laws that predate or modify the British North America Act make upthe legislation that has been come to be known as the canadian constitution.
http://www.informationblast.com/Canadian_Constitution.html
Constitution of Canada
From Wikipedia
The Canadian Constitution is the highest law of Canada . It is uncodified . It outlines Canada's system of government, as well as the civil rights of all Canadian citizens. Generally speaking all of the British laws that predate or modify the British North America Act make up the legislation that has been come to be known as the Canadian Constitution. The Constitution, as it is generally known, is made up of many parts (see the list below) , the most significant that are most often cited today are:
  • The Constitution Act of 1867 . Formerly known as the British North America Act of 1867, this act was the act of the British Parliament that granted Canada self-government, and spelled out how Canada's government would operate. The Constitution Act of 1982 . This granted Canada full political independence from Britain, and incorporating a Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms outlining the individual rights of every citizen of Canada. See Canada Act 1982
Since the Charter has become an often cited portion of the Constitution. The predecessor acts and orders that are listed below are generally not as well known. These acts have sometimes been denounced as"messy," "almost incoherent" or worse for their somewhat convoluted form and long, unconsolidated history. However, they remain the laws that determine the division of powers between federal and provincial jurisdictions, the terms upon which new provinces entered Canada and the division between executive, legislative and judicial areas of power in a manner very different from the United States.

46. - Research Note - Canada's Constitution Prior To 1982
Prior to the patriation of the canadian constitution in 1982, the CanadianConstitution consisted of a number of British statutes.
http://www.constitutional-law.net/chartersample.html
Joseph E. Magnet
Constitutional Law of Canada, 8th ed. (2001)

Part VI Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
Chapter 1. Introduction
(a) The Charter: Origins And Expectations - Research Note -
Canada's Constitution prior to 1982
Canada has a written Constitution which acknowledges a similarity in principle to the English system. Prior to the patriation of the Canadian Constitution in 1982, the Canadian Constitution consisted of a number of British statutes. Most important was the British North America Act, 1867 and its various amendments. The Canadian Constitution represents a marriage of parliamentarism and federalism. Parliamentary government implies that complete legislative power vests in Parliament (parliamentary sovereignty). Federalism implies a distribution of legislative powers between the federal and provincial governments. Parliamentary sovereignty resides between two "sovereign-like" orders of government. Prior to 1982, Canadian courts reviewed the exercise of lawmaking power by federal and provincial legislative bodies by the doctrine of legal federalism. Legal federalism concerns conflicts as to whether a challenged law falls within provincial or federal jurisdiction, the implication being that invasion of federal jurisdiction by a province is illegal or unconstitutional, and vice versa. [A list of Canada's most important Constitutional Acts which remain in force can be found in the QL database CAC.]

47. Nova Scotia Laws
Constitution. The canadian constitution is only partly written. The principalwritten parts affecting Nova Scotia are three British statutes, namely,
http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/legc/lawns.htm
Law of Nova Scotia
The Nova Scotia law consists of the constitution, the common law, federal statutes and regulations and provincial statutes and regulations. Constitution The Canadian constitution is only partly written. The principal written parts affecting Nova Scotia are three British statutes, namely, The largely unwritten constitution of the United Kingdom is not reproduced in the Constitution Act, 1867 Common Law and Statutes Upon the establishment of Nova Scotia as a British colony, it received the common law and statute law of the United Kingdom, except to the extent that that law was inherently inapplicable or unsuitable to Nova Scotia. Upon the first meeting of the Nova Scotia Legislature on October 3, 1758, the "received law" of England was fixed and unaffected by subsequent changes in the English law. It could be amended, repealed or added to by the Nova Scotia Legislature.

48. Tilting At Windmills - Original Intent And The Canadian Constitution
You are here Home February 2004 Original Intent and the canadian constitution.February 23, 2004. Original Intent and the canadian constitution.
http://www.la-mancha.net/archives/000042.html
Tilting at Windmills
You are here: Home February 2004
February 23, 2004
Original Intent and the Canadian Constitution
Posted by Kevin Brennan at February 23, 2004 02:17 PM in Political Philosophy Other weblogs commenting on this post Although sympathetic to the idea of civil unions for homosexual couples, I've been bothered at what I perceived as judicial activism that stepped outside the intent of the Constitution. But it seems I may have been wrong to think that: One Tory framer, Roy McMurtry, went on to be one of the judges who wrote Ontario's decision allowing same-sex marriages...the truth is, none of Canada's framers have any respect for the textualist or originalist forms of interpretation. In fact, they wrote the Charter using language that specifically precludes such interpretations. So, I guess I can't complain that the decision went beyond the intent of the Charter anymore. In a way, that's a relief because it forces me to confront my real issues. While I'm at it, I'll dispense with the other strawman, the complaint that judges are unelected. True. But so are civil servants, who are called on to interpret the law all the time. Both make errors in judgement that force us to amend the law or appeal to Parliament. Interestingly, this is not true in the U.S. Given the overt politicization of judicial appointments there, it's not at all clear to me that American judges have any less moral right to make law than American politicians.

49. The Canadian Constitution
Academic Copy Request, The canadian constitution The Players in the Process thathas led from Patriation to Meech Lake to an Uncertain Future By David Milne
http://www.formac.ca/main_book.php?id=309&type=U

50. MACHRAY REVIEW 2 Charter Of Rights The Canadian Constitution
The Relation of the Charter of Rights to the canadian constitution. The Canadianconstitution of 1867 conforms to neither the American nor the European type.
http://www.prayerbook.ca/machray/pbscmr2b.htm

51. Assorted Grotesqueries: Newfound Calls For Re-examination Of Canadian Constituti
May 11, 2003. Newfound Calls for Reexamination of canadian constitution.F. rom Saturday’s Globe and Mail in an article by Shawn
http://www.sendecki.com/weblog/archives/individual/2003/05/11/newfound_calls_for
Assorted Grotesqueries
disporting with pink elephants...
Main
May 11, 2003
Newfound Calls for Re-examination of Canadian Constitution
F PM W. L. Posted by Daniel Sendecki TrackBack Mail This Entry
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52. The Canadian Constitution
THE canadian constitution. I have been interested in the canadian constitutionever since Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau started the
http://www.cam.org/~ahryck/ukugmtl/CONSTN_INDEX.html
THE CANADIAN CONSTITUTION
I have been interested in the Canadian Constitution ever since Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau started the repatriation process in 1980, the unilateral repatriation in 1982, the continuing controversy thereafter, the ill-fated 1990 Meech Lake Accord and especially the Charlottetown Accord Referendum on Oct. 26, 1992. Most recently we have been subjected to the Bloc Quebecois in Ottawa, the Parti Quebecois in Quebec and the narrowly defeated Quebec Referendum on Oct. 30, 1995. Below I have listed the six most relevant documents that I have written on the subject: = Letter to Schreyer, Trudeau, Romanow
= Letter to Clyde Wells
CONSTN92.DOC
= Canadian Constitutional Proposals 1992
= Summary of Constitutional Proposals 1992
= Letter to Joe Clark
= CANADIANS ALL! Constitutional Proposals
The Constitutional Conference Committee spearheaded by Bert Brown in Calgary has recently suggested the creation of Constituent Assemblies across Canada to draft an appropriate constitution. Although their website is not yet available, the contact person is Elaine Johnson (Email: ejohnson@freenet.calgary.ab.ca). I hope that my material will be of interest to this Committee and to Canadians, in general.

53. Canada.justice.gc.ca/cgi-bin/folioisa.dll/CONST_E.NFO/query=*/toc/%7B@1%7D
Fw The canadian constitution and Affirmative Action
http://canada.justice.gc.ca/cgi-bin/folioisa.dll/CONST_E.NFO/query=*/toc/{@1}
siteDirector(TM) ISA DLL v3.1 (r121896): 5020-2; could not connect to

54. SOUVERAINETÉ
Translate this page «« PQ Lettre ouverte à mon premier ministre. canadian constitutionet défaites électorales (*). Jean-Luc Gouin, Québec TRIBUNE
http://www.vigile.net/ds-souv/docs2/02-4-19-jlg-qf.html
«« PQ
Lettre ouverte à mon premier ministre
Canadian Constitution et défaites électorales (*)
Jean-Luc Gouin, Québec
TRIBUNE LIBRE 19 avril 2002
(Texte publié dans LeSoleil du 24.4.2002 sous le titre :
Le rapatriement unilatéral de la «Canadian Constitution»)
«Comme s’ils ne savaient pas
ce qu’il y a de lâcheté dans la modestie.»
Charles de Gaulle, à propos de ses compatriotes,
in André Malraux, Les Chênes qu’on abat
M. Landry,
Dans les derniers mois, M. le Premier ministre, vous avez visé – et misé sur – le centre de l'échiquier politique souverainiste. Quelque part en quelque sorte entre le chaud et le tiède. Non sans raison, non sans motifs articulés et conséquents. Certes. Or effectivement, il faut en prendre acte avec humilité, j'imagine, nous n'assistons pas aux résultats escomptés ; résultats appelés de vos voeux et espérés par vous et votre équipe, bien sûr, mais au moins tout autant par les membres de la grande famille de ces Québécois, nombreux quoique fort discrets pour l’heure, dont la volonté de liberté du peuple auquel ils appartiennent leur reste, envers et contre tout, profondément, indubitablement et désespérément chevillée au coeur. Ainsi qu'à leur science du destin. De peuple «colonisé» à « quelque chose comme un grand peuple », celui-là même dont nous entretenait M. Lévesque il y a quelque vingt-cinq ans, il semblerait hélas que nous soyons à nouveau irrésistiblement séduits, comme entité collective (en cela largement encouragés, il faut bien le dire, par tous les Jean C rien et tous les Stéphane D paysé du territoire, que l'Histoire d'ailleurs jugera avec grande sévérité) par la première éventualité de l'alternative : un peuple satisfait, voire heureux de sa complaisante sujétion à une autorité étrangère, à un autre peuple.

55. Researching Canadian Law
HISTORY AND PURPOSE. CONSTITUTION. The canadian constitution originatedfrom numerous statutes and is not based on a single document.
http://library.law.smu.edu/resguide/canada.htm
RESEARCHING CANADIAN LAW
Underwood Law Library Southern Methodist University Guide 703 Print this Page This information was compiled as of January 1, 2001. Please be certain to verify and update with your own research. This information is for reference use in Underwood Law Library and is not intended as a substitute for obtaining legal advice.
HISTORY AND PURPOSE
CONSTITUTION
The Canadian constitution originated from numerous statutes and is not based on a single document. Prior to April 17, 1982, the written component of the constitution consisted primarily of three British statutes enacted by the Parliament of Great Britain. The three statutes - the Colonial Laws Validity Act of 1865, the British North America Act of 1867 ("B.N.A. Act"), and the Statute of Westminster of 1931 - provided the basic framework for the Canadian constitution. The B.N.A. Act was the most important component of the written constitution. Any law passed by the Canadian Parliament or a legislature had to conform to the jurisdictional constraints set out in the B.N.A. Act.

56. The Rule Of Law In The Canadian Constitution
The Rule of Law in the canadian constitution. In discussing the vari­ouscomponents of Canada s unwritten constitution, Dawson argued
http://www.canadianjusticereviewboard.ca/MortonRuleofLawinConstitution.htm
home page
articles discussion news room ... clipboard
The Rule of Law in the Canadian Constitution
On December 4, 1946 , Frank Roncarelli was informed by the Quebec Liq­uor Commission that the liquor license for his Montreal restaurant had been revoked "forever." Mr. Roncarelli had not violated any Liquor Com­mission guidelines, nor had he been charged with or convicted of any criminal wrongdoing. The license was revoked because, as Mr. Roncarelli and indeed everyone else knew, Maurice Duplessis, the Premier of Que­bec, wanted to punish him for his membership in and financial support of the Jehovah's Witnesses. The Jehovah's Witnesses are an evangelizing, fundamentalist protestant sect, who had outraged Duplessis and the French Catholic majority in Quebec through their outspoken criticisms of the Catholic Church and its priests. The Duplessis government had begun a campaign oflegal harassment against the Witnesses, by arresting them for distributing their printed materials wi thou t a license. Roncarelli frustra ted this plan by regularly providing bail money for his arrested fellow-believ­ers, who would then return to the streets. Roncarelli thus became a special target of the harassment policies of the

57. Canadian Constitutional History
nothing eg./ constitution* add another term if necessary to narrow search eg./constitution* and video Browse 320s Political Science 971s Canadian History.
http://www.westmount.ci.yrdsb.edu.on.ca/constitution.html
Westmount Collegiate Institute Suite 103 - 1000 New Westminster Dr. Thornhill, ON L4J 8G3 Tel: (905) 882-0277 Fax: (905) 882-2450 return to homepage
CANADIAN CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY
BNA ACT
Canada in the Making - BNA Act 1867
Canada in the Making - Essays

The British North America Act

A Guide to the BNA Act
CANADA'S CONSTITUTIONS
Constitutional Acts 1867 to 1982
What is the Canadian Constitution

Canadian Constitutional Documents - A Legal History

Thomson-Nelson The Constitution of Canada
...
Canada - Constitution - Menu
GENERAL
Structure of the Government of Canada

History of Canada's Parliament Buildings

Canadian Encyclopedia
General Encyclopedias Page BOOKS / VIDEOS IN WCI LIBRARY COLLECTION - search under Basic Searches tab - type topic under Subject Keyword eg./ constitution (note: - broaden topic if original search found nothing eg./ constitution* - add another term if necessary to narrow search eg./

58. FNGI Resource Centre
Resource Centre Constitutions canadian constitution. canadian constitution Websites. Canadian canadian constitution - Options. Subscribe
http://66.129.69.182/resource/index.asp?TOPICID=-779325247

59. The Canadian Constitution : Http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/3185/
Click here to continue.
http://www.canadalegal.com/gosite.asp?s=328

60. Canada Student Debt: Violation Of The Canadian Constitution
Topic Violation of the canadian constitution,
http://www.canadastudentdebt.ca/forum_posts.asp?TID=692&PN=1

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