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Canadian Federalism and Treaty Powers
Organic Constitutionalism at Work
Series:  Diversitas  Vol. 2
Year of Publication: 2009
Bruxelles, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2009. 305 pp., 1 table
ISBN 978-90-5201-453-1  br.
 
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SFR 42.00 * 28.80 ** 29.60 26.90 £ 26.90 US-$ 41.95
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Discipline
  Law
  Political Science
Book synopsis
With the increased mobility and interdependence brought on by globalisation, governments can no longer deal effectively with what were traditionally regarded as «domestic issues» unless they cooperate among themselves. International law may once have been a sort of inter-state law concerned mostly with relations between states, but it now looks increasingly inside state borders and has become, to a large degree, a trans-governmental law. While this creates significant challenges even for highly-unified «nation-states», the challenges are even greater for federations in which powers have been divided up between the central government and federated states. What roles should central governments and federated states play in creating and implementing this new form of governance?
Using the Canadian federation as its starting point, this case study illustrates a range of factors to be considered in the appropriate distribution of treaty powers within a federation. Professor Cyr also shows how - because it has no specific provisions dealing with the distribution of treaty powers - the Canadian constitution has «organically» developed a tight-knit set of rules and principles responding to these distributional factors. This book is therefore both about the role of federated states in the current world order and an illustration of how organic constitutionalism works.
Contents
Contents: The Labour Conventions Case: The Factual and Legal Context of the Labour Conventions Case - «There is Only One Heir to the Mother Country»: The Federal Government's Sovereignist Arguments - «But We Are Equally Sisters»: The Provinces' Federalist Arguments - «Canada is a Federation»: The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council - Treaty-Making in the Canadian Federation: Rebutting the Case for Plenary Federal Treaty-Making Powers - Making the Case for Provincial Treaty-Making Powers - Treaty Implementation in the Canadian Federation: Section 132 Cannot Be Judicially Revived - Section 91 and the Federal Powers Over «Peace, Order and Good Government» - Extra-Territoriality or the «Sufficient Connection» Doctrine - Constitutional Amendments.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
The Author: Hugo Cyr is Professor of Public Law and Legal Theory at the Université du Québec à Montréal and a member of the Québec Bar. He is a member of the Centre de recherche interdisciplinaire sur la diversité au Québec (CRIDAQ) and Vice President of the Chaire UNESCO d'étude des fondements philosophiques de la justice et de la société démocratique. He has been a Boulton Fellow at McGill University, a law clerk at the Supreme Court of Canada and a Visiting Researcher at the European Academy of Legal Theory. Professor Cyr has also taught at McGill University and the Université de Montréal.
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