In the Constitution Act, 1982, the federal government and the provinces made a bargain regarding Senate reform: while Parliament should be allowed to make minor changes to the Senate unilaterally, certain specified changes, including changes to the method of selecting Senators, would require provincial consent. This bargain reflects the fact that Senate reform would affect both federal and provincial interests, given the Senate’s dual roles as a house of the federal Parliament and, at least ideally, as a means by which provincial and regional interests can be represented in Ottawa. The Harper government’s efforts to unilaterally provide for the election of “Senate nominees,” most recently via Bill C-7, would subvert this bargain. This comme...
The Supreme Court of Canada was established in 1875 by a statute of Parliament that was enacted purs...
Commentators have suggested that the unsuccessful national referendum to ratify the 1992 Charlotteto...
Although the metaphor of "constitutional architecture" appeared in some of the Supreme Court of Cana...
In the Constitution Act, 1982, the federal government and the provinces made a bargain regarding Sen...
Constitutional conventions are of central importance to the operation of the Canadian constitution; ...
The Senate Reference did not provide an ideal situation for clarifying the nature and limits of the ...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
The Senate Reference is ultimately a decision about how democratic decision-making ought to be condu...
The new federal government committed that 2015 would be the last election under the first past the p...
Senate reform is an issue that has been a topic of discussion and debate in Canada’s political spher...
The framers of Canada’s Constitution had a vision for the Senate as a complementary, deliberative bo...
This Article considers the process by which electoral reform ought to take place, focusing in partic...
Canadian constitutional law is seldom criticised for its failure to live up to the ideal of the Rule...
Democratic constitutions often entrench provisions against formal amendment. For example, republican...
This article assesses the constitutionalfoundation by which Parliament lends its lawmaking powers to...
The Supreme Court of Canada was established in 1875 by a statute of Parliament that was enacted purs...
Commentators have suggested that the unsuccessful national referendum to ratify the 1992 Charlotteto...
Although the metaphor of "constitutional architecture" appeared in some of the Supreme Court of Cana...
In the Constitution Act, 1982, the federal government and the provinces made a bargain regarding Sen...
Constitutional conventions are of central importance to the operation of the Canadian constitution; ...
The Senate Reference did not provide an ideal situation for clarifying the nature and limits of the ...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
The Senate Reference is ultimately a decision about how democratic decision-making ought to be condu...
The new federal government committed that 2015 would be the last election under the first past the p...
Senate reform is an issue that has been a topic of discussion and debate in Canada’s political spher...
The framers of Canada’s Constitution had a vision for the Senate as a complementary, deliberative bo...
This Article considers the process by which electoral reform ought to take place, focusing in partic...
Canadian constitutional law is seldom criticised for its failure to live up to the ideal of the Rule...
Democratic constitutions often entrench provisions against formal amendment. For example, republican...
This article assesses the constitutionalfoundation by which Parliament lends its lawmaking powers to...
The Supreme Court of Canada was established in 1875 by a statute of Parliament that was enacted purs...
Commentators have suggested that the unsuccessful national referendum to ratify the 1992 Charlotteto...
Although the metaphor of "constitutional architecture" appeared in some of the Supreme Court of Cana...