Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Alberta Law Review banner image
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
  • Browse
    • Current
    • Archives
    • Online Supplement
  • Submissions
    • Submission Guidelines
  • Patrons
  • Energy Law Issues
  • Morrow Essay Contest
Search
  • Login
  1. Home /
  2. Archives /
  3. Vol 29, No 2

Vol 29, No 2

Published: 1991-02-01

In Memoriam

  • In Memoriam: Donald V. Smiley

    Ronald L. Watts
    275
    • PDF

Articles

  • The Possibilities of Interpretive Liberalism

    Mark Tushnet
    276
    • PDF
  • Standing Up for Notwithstanding

    Peter H. Russell
    293
    • PDF
  • Review Article: Thinking and Writing about Meech Lake

    Allan Tupper
    310
    • PDF
  • Rethinking the Parliamentary System: Contributions from the Australian Debate

    Cheryl Saunders
    336
    • PDF
  • Who Are the Metis People in Section 35(2)

    Catherine Bell
    351
    • PDF
  • Applying the Charter to Discretionary Authority

    June M. Ross
    382
    • PDF
  • Ecological Unity and Political Fragmentation: The Implications of the Brundtland Report for the Canadian Constitutional Order

    Mark Walters
    420
    • PDF
  • Governmental Interventions in Constitutional Litigation: An Analysis of Section 25 of the Judicature Act

    Patrick Bendin
    450
    • PDF
  • In the Balance: The Art of Norman Rockwell and Alex Colville as Discourses on the Constitutions of the United States and Canada

    David Howes
    475
    • PDF
  • Aboriginal Rights and Canadian Sovereignty: An Essay on R. v. Sparrow

    Michael Asch, Patrick Macklem
    498
    • PDF

Book Reviews

  • The Sexual Liberals and the Attack on Feminism by Dorchen Leidholdt & Jance G. Raymond, eds.

    Annalise Acorn
    518
    • PDF
  • How Not to Write Constitutional History A Review of Supreme Court of Canada Decision-Making: The Benchmark of Rand, Kerwin, and Martland by Randall Balcome, Edward McBride, and Dawn Russell

    Dale Gibson
    532
    • PDF

follow

donate

about

Welcome to the Alberta Law Review

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. 

Newsletter Signup

Click HERE if you would like to sign up for the ALR Newsletter.

Information

  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians

University of Alberta LibraryAlberta Law Review | ISSN: 1925-8356
Editors: Lauren Stavert & Eli Ziff
Contact | Privacy Policy

More information about the publishing system, Platform and Workflow by OJS/PKP.