The purpose of this thesis is to explain why the government of Canada decided to refer three questions related to whether or not the government of Quebec could unilaterally effect the secession of Quebec from Canada, to the Supreme Court for a judicial opinion in 1996. To do so, this thesis will address two important questions related to the objectives that the government of Canada had in initiating the Quebec Secession Reference. First, why did the government of Canada wait until 1996 to clarify how a province could be removed from the federation when there was a significant secessionist movement in Quebec in 1968, a secessionist government of Quebec in 1976, a referendum on the secession of Quebec from Canada in 1980, and another in 1995?...
1noThe paper analyses the longstanding issue of Quebec's self-determination, in light of the recent ...
As this chapter is being written, it is not possible to envision that an end to Canada\u27s great po...
The Quebec Secession Reference addressed divisive issues with far-reaching implications for the Cana...
When the Supreme Court of Canada issued its judgment on the legality of unilateral Quebec secession ...
In 1998 the Supreme Court of Canada was asked by the federal government to gives it opinion on a mat...
This paper considers the various legal issues that would arise in the context of Quebec\u27s secessi...
Following the narrow vote against sovereignty in the 1995 Quebec referendum, the federal government ...
This article does not seek to examine comprehensively either the political or the legal intricacies ...
The Reference of the Supreme Court of Canada Re Secession of Quebec was the first time a tribunal di...
This dissertation examines the changing patterns of intergovernmental relations among political elit...
[À l'origine dans / Was originally part of : Fac. Droit - Coll. facultaire - Droit constitutionnel e...
This article attempts to marry direct democratic deliberation with the enforcement of important cons...
The Supreme Court’s decision in the Patriation Reference was a landmark in the jurisprudential analy...
The courts have different roles in policing Canadian federalism and Scottish devolution. In Canada, ...
tag=1 data=Quebec and Canadian federalism. by Edward McWhinney tag=2 data=McWhinney, Edward tag=3 ...
1noThe paper analyses the longstanding issue of Quebec's self-determination, in light of the recent ...
As this chapter is being written, it is not possible to envision that an end to Canada\u27s great po...
The Quebec Secession Reference addressed divisive issues with far-reaching implications for the Cana...
When the Supreme Court of Canada issued its judgment on the legality of unilateral Quebec secession ...
In 1998 the Supreme Court of Canada was asked by the federal government to gives it opinion on a mat...
This paper considers the various legal issues that would arise in the context of Quebec\u27s secessi...
Following the narrow vote against sovereignty in the 1995 Quebec referendum, the federal government ...
This article does not seek to examine comprehensively either the political or the legal intricacies ...
The Reference of the Supreme Court of Canada Re Secession of Quebec was the first time a tribunal di...
This dissertation examines the changing patterns of intergovernmental relations among political elit...
[À l'origine dans / Was originally part of : Fac. Droit - Coll. facultaire - Droit constitutionnel e...
This article attempts to marry direct democratic deliberation with the enforcement of important cons...
The Supreme Court’s decision in the Patriation Reference was a landmark in the jurisprudential analy...
The courts have different roles in policing Canadian federalism and Scottish devolution. In Canada, ...
tag=1 data=Quebec and Canadian federalism. by Edward McWhinney tag=2 data=McWhinney, Edward tag=3 ...
1noThe paper analyses the longstanding issue of Quebec's self-determination, in light of the recent ...
As this chapter is being written, it is not possible to envision that an end to Canada\u27s great po...
The Quebec Secession Reference addressed divisive issues with far-reaching implications for the Cana...