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  1. Home /
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  3. Vol 30, No 2: Centre for Constitutional Studies

Vol 30, No 2: Centre for Constitutional Studies

Published: 1992-02-01

In Memoriam

  • In Memoriam: Professor Emeritus Alexander Smith

    Wilbur F. Bowker
    425
    • PDF

Articles

  • Can Canada Survive the Charter

    Charles Taylor
    427
    • PDF
  • Canada's Constitutional Options

    J. P. Meekison
    448
    • PDF
  • Aboriginal Self-Government and the Construction of Canadian Constitutional Identity

    Michael Asch
    465
    • PDF
  • The Crisis of Constitutional Literalism in Australia

    Greg Craven
    492
    • PDF
  • Constitutionalized Intergovernmental Agreements and Third Parties: Canada and Australia

    Nigel Bankes
    524
    • PDF
  • In the Absence of Medical Men: Midwife-Attended Home Birth, the Charter of Rights and Antique Alberta Legislation

    Lynne Sears Williams, J. Chris Levy
    555
    • PDF
  • Distorted: A View of Canadian Multiculturalism within a Bilingual Framework

    Hanson R. Hosein
    597
    • PDF
  • The Royal Prerogative and Equality Rights: Can Medieval Classism Coexist with Section 15 of the Charter

    Gerald Chipeur
    625
    • PDF
  • Does the Charter Mandate One Person, One Vote

    F. L. Morton, Rainer Knopff
    669
    • PDF
  • Democracy and Representation: A Critique of Morton and Knopff

    Allan Tupper
    695
    • PDF
  • Discarding the Rose-Coloured Glasses: A Commentary on Asch and MacKlem

    Thomas Isaac
    708
    • PDF

Book Reviews

  • The Alchemy of Race and Rights: Diary of Law Professor by Patricia J. Williams

    Kate Sutherland
    713
    • PDF

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The Alberta Law Review (ALR) is a student-run publication whose primary purpose is to enhance discourse on Canadian legal issues. Founded in 1955, the ALR is published by the Alberta Law Review Society, an organization consisting of law students at the University of Alberta and the University of Calgary. Built upon the hard work of student editors at both law faculties, the ALR is published every quarter and has roughly 1,000 pages per volume. 

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