When establishment of a supreme court for the young Canadian Confederation was first mooted after 1867, reaction in the Maritimes was strikingly positive. The Halifax Morning Chronicle, for example, which by no means was yet reconciled to the new British North American union and which saw the court quite accurately as securing and centralizing the judicial authority in Canada, nevertheless conceded the indispensability of such an institution: If this Confederation continues to exist of course such a court will be a necessity. There must be a central and paramount authority and other things being favourable we would support the bill in toto.1 Similarly the chief justice of New Brunswick, W.J. Ritchie, was in no doubt as to the appropriaten...
The Supreme Court of Canada was established in 1875 by a statute of Parliament that was enacted purs...
When the Supreme Court of Canada issued its judgment on the legality of unilateral Quebec secession ...
The creation and mandate of the Canadian Department of Justice mirrored a congruence of law and poli...
When establishment of a supreme court for the young Canadian Confederation was first mooted after 18...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is a study of how New Brunswick judges interpreted the ...
Confederation with Canada in 1949 marked a drastic change in Newfoundland’s identity as it moved fro...
Signed: W.J. Ritchie, Chief Justice."Presented to Parliament on 21st May 1869, by the Hon. Sir John ...
Scholars have often demonstrated that courts in Canada have long been responsive to the political, s...
Attributed by the Canadian Archives to John Marshall, Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, No...
In its Preamble, the Constitution of Canada speaks of the desire of the Provinces of Canada to be f...
In 1927 the people of Canada, with due pomp and ceremony celebrated the diamond jubilee of the union...
Many accounts have been written of the events leading to Newfoundland\u27s union with Canada in 1949...
Federalism is still a relevant and vital aspect of Canadian Constitutional Law. Although a lower pro...
The presence of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the Constitution of Canada has transformed the...
The evolution of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has been well described elsewhere.\u27 This paper ...
The Supreme Court of Canada was established in 1875 by a statute of Parliament that was enacted purs...
When the Supreme Court of Canada issued its judgment on the legality of unilateral Quebec secession ...
The creation and mandate of the Canadian Department of Justice mirrored a congruence of law and poli...
When establishment of a supreme court for the young Canadian Confederation was first mooted after 18...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is a study of how New Brunswick judges interpreted the ...
Confederation with Canada in 1949 marked a drastic change in Newfoundland’s identity as it moved fro...
Signed: W.J. Ritchie, Chief Justice."Presented to Parliament on 21st May 1869, by the Hon. Sir John ...
Scholars have often demonstrated that courts in Canada have long been responsive to the political, s...
Attributed by the Canadian Archives to John Marshall, Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, No...
In its Preamble, the Constitution of Canada speaks of the desire of the Provinces of Canada to be f...
In 1927 the people of Canada, with due pomp and ceremony celebrated the diamond jubilee of the union...
Many accounts have been written of the events leading to Newfoundland\u27s union with Canada in 1949...
Federalism is still a relevant and vital aspect of Canadian Constitutional Law. Although a lower pro...
The presence of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the Constitution of Canada has transformed the...
The evolution of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has been well described elsewhere.\u27 This paper ...
The Supreme Court of Canada was established in 1875 by a statute of Parliament that was enacted purs...
When the Supreme Court of Canada issued its judgment on the legality of unilateral Quebec secession ...
The creation and mandate of the Canadian Department of Justice mirrored a congruence of law and poli...