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Full bibliography 2,265 resources
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This article is about structural analysis in Canadian constitutional law. Structural analysis is a methodology for identifying unwritten components of the constitution and giving them effect. These unwritten components—Parliamentary privilege, Crown prerogative, constitutional conventions and underlying constitutional principles—pertain to the basic institutions of the state and the norms that govern their operations and relations. We explain how structural analysis operates and show that it is essential to discerning and applying the unwritten constitution.
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2020 41 Windsor Review of Legal and Social Issues, 2020 CanLIIDocs 1608
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"As the Queen marks seventy years on the throne, this engaging work examines Canada's constitutional monarchy. As Queen Elizabeth II marks her Platinum Jubilee in 2022, and following the controversial resignation of a governor general, much discussion and debate has taken place about the monarchy in Canada. This engaging work examines a broad range of topics related to Canada's constitutional monarchy, its present state, and future. Topics include Crown-Indigenous relations; the foundational place of the Crown in Canada's system of government; the Crown and the media; the Crown and Francophone Canada; the viceregal offices and the role of the administrator; royal tours; Canadian Chapels Royal; the Crown in Canada's geography--and Queen Elizabeth herself."-- Provided by publisher.
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For more than a century, Black's Law Dictionary has been the gold standard for the language of law. This edition contains more than 50,000 terms, including more than 7,500 terms new to this edition. It also features expanded bibliographic coverage, definitions of more than 1,000 law-related abbreviations and acronyms, and reviewed and edited Latin maxims
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"This is a text on the law concerning the immunity (sometimes known as privilege) of members of parliament (federal and provincial) and the Senate with respect to their political activities and comments in the House of Commons. covers everything from privilege of freedom of speech, to publication of parliamentary papers, proceedings and procedure in the House of Commons, to privilege from freedom of arrest, the jurisdiction of the courts over the Senate and House of Commons."-- Provided by publisher.
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