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Forging Alberta's Constitutional Framework
Richard Connors
John M. Law
University of Alberta. Centre for Constitutional Studies
出版
University of Alberta
, 2005-11
主題
History / General
History / Canada / General
History / Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies)
Law / General
Law / Constitutional
Law / Legal History
ISBN
0888644582
9780888644589
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=fH8e7dOAWPgC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Forging Alberta’s Constitutional Framework
analyzes the principal events and processes that precipitated the emergence and formation of the law and legal culture of Alberta from the foundation of the Hudson’s Bay in 1670 until the eve of the centenary of the Province in 2005. The formation of Alberta’s constitution and legal institutions was by no means a simple process by which English and Canadian law was imposed upon a receptive and passive population. Challenges to authority, latent lawlessness, interaction between indigenous and settler societies, periods (pre- and post-1905) of jurisdictional confusion, and demands for individual, group, and provincial rights and recognitions are as much part of Alberta’s legal history as the heroic and mythic images of an emergent and orderly Canadian west patrolled from the outset by red coated mounted police and peopled by peaceful and law-abiding subjects of the Crown. Papers focus on the development of criminal law in the Canadian west in the nineteenth century; the Natural Resources Transfer Agreement of 1930; the National Energy Program of the 1980s; Federal-Provincial relations; and the role and responsibilities of the offices of Justices of the Peace and of the Lieutenant-Governor; and the legacies of the Lougheed and Klein governments.