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In an era where federal-provincial tensions over Canada's international commitments dominate headlines, a clear understanding of our nation's foreign affairs powers has never been more crucial. Foreign Affairs in the Canadian Constitution analyzes how Canada's foreign affairs power has been applied, and how it is defined within the law. Drawing on case studies from federal-provincial flashpoints over free trade in the 1980s to the showdown over federal climate change legislation, Scott Fairley bridges the silos of federal executive power cloaked in the royal prerogative and constitutionally…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In an era where federal-provincial tensions over Canada's international commitments dominate headlines, a clear understanding of our nation's foreign affairs powers has never been more crucial. Foreign Affairs in the Canadian Constitution analyzes how Canada's foreign affairs power has been applied, and how it is defined within the law. Drawing on case studies from federal-provincial flashpoints over free trade in the 1980s to the showdown over federal climate change legislation, Scott Fairley bridges the silos of federal executive power cloaked in the royal prerogative and constitutionally divided federal and provincial legislative powers to define an integrated understanding of foreign affairs within Canada's constitution. He also highlights this Canadian historical anomaly and makes the case that it has actually been resolved through constitutional evolution, governmental practice, and judicial interpretation which have firmly established foreign affairs as a constitutionally supported field of federal jurisdiction. This rigorously argued account allows us a better understanding of Canada as a unified nation-state within the community of nations.
Autorenporträt
H. Scott Fairley is a partner at Cambridge LLP, Toronto, with extensive experience litigating constitutional and international issues before all levels of Canadian courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada. He was formerly a tenured professor at the University of Windsor, and served as constitutional counsel to the Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General before entering private practice. Dr. Fairley holds two advanced degrees in law, an LLM from New York University and an SJD from Harvard University. A past president of the Canadian Council on International Law, he has lectured widely and published over seventy articles, comments, and chapters in books. He is also the principal co-author of International Law, a title within the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest.