Volume 4 Content Overview
Volume 4, No. 1 (1992)
Alberta Nurses v. A Contemptuous Supreme Court of Canada
by Judy Fudge and Harry Glasbeek (Osgoode Hall Law School, North York, Ontario)
Treaty Federalism
by Andrew Bear Robe (Division Manager for Indian Government, Land Claims and Membership, Siksika Tribal Administration)
Harm Revisited: R. v. Butler
by Sheila Noonan (Faculty of Law, Queen's University)
Britain's Quiet Revolution
by Norman Lewis (Faculty of Law, The University of Sheffield)
A Remedy for the Nineties: Schachter v. R. and Haig & Birch v. Canada
by Nitya Duclos (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of British Columbia)
Volume 4 No. 2 (1993)
Learning From Failure: Lessons From Charlottetown
by Kathy L. Brock (Political Studies, St. John's College, University of Manitoba)
Stepping Stone or Pyrrhic Victory? Reform and the Referendum
by Trevor Harrison (recently completed his doctoral thesis in Sociology, University of Alberta, dealing with the Reform Party, and will be convocating in the Spring of 1993)
The Canada Clause That Was: How Courts Use Interpretive Clauses
by Shirish P. Chotalia (of the Alberta Bar, Commissioner to Alberta Human Rights Commission)
Treaty Indigenous Peoples and the Charlottetown Accord: The Message in the Breeze
by Sharon Venne (citizen of the Blood Tribe within the Treaty Seven area of Canada)
Solutions to the Future of Canada and Québec After the October 26th Referendum: Genuine Sovereignties Within a Novel Union
by Daniel Turp (Professor, Faculty of Law, Université de Montréal)
Banquo's Ghost and Other Constitutional Incubuses: Some Lessons from the Charlottetown Process
by Brian L. Cowley (Political Science Department, Dalhousie University)
Amending the Canadian Constitution by David Beatty (Faculty of Law, University of Toronto)
Canada's Quest for Constitutional Perfection
by J. Peter Meekison (Belzberg Chair of Constitutional Studies, Centre for Constitutional Studies, University of Alberta)
Volume 4 No. 3 (1993)
The Changing Face of Human Rights in Canada
by Michelle Falardeau-Ramsay (Deputy Chief Commissioner, Canadian Human Rights Commission)
The Supreme Court and Mandatory Retirement: Sanctioning the Status Quo
by Shirish P. Chotalia (of the Alberta Bar, Commissioner to Alberta Human Rights Commission)
Distinguishing Zundel and Keegstra
by Bruce P. Elman (Faculty of Law, University of Alberta) and Erin Nelson (Law Student, University of Alberta)
A Constitutional Revolution: Israel's Basic Laws
by Justice Aharon Barak (of the Supreme Court of Israel)
The Canadian Charter as a Model for Israel's Basic Laws
by Lorraine Weinrib (Faculty of Law, University of Toronto)
The Australian Republican Movement and its Implications for Canada
by John D. Whyte (Faculty of Law, Queen's University)
Volume 4 No. 4 (1993)
Constructing Canadian Identities
by Kenneth McRoberts (Director, Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies, York University)
It's the Law of the Land: Gender and the Geography of Hope
by Donna Greschner (College of Law, University of Saskatchewan, Chief Commissioner, Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission)
The Supreme Court Entrenches Parliamentary Privilege Out of the Charter's Reach: Donohoe v. CBC
by Andrew Heard (Department of Political Science, Simon Fraser University)
The Possibilities of Schachter: A Response to Professor Duclos
by Ryan Rempel (of the Saskatchewan Bar)
Constitutionalizing the Patriarchy: Aboriginal Women and Aboriginal Government
by Joyce Green (Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Political Science, University of Alberta)