Volume 27.2 (2023)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline, EBSCO, & GALE.  They will be available in open access on this website as of October 2024 – one year from date of publication.

Articles

Book Reviews

Volume 26.1 & 27.1 (2022-2023)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline, EBSCO, & GALE. They will be available in open access on this website as of November 2023 – one year from date of publication.

Articles

Volume 26.1 (2021-2022)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline, EBSCO, & GALE. They will be available in open access on this website as of May 2023 – one year from date of publication.

Articles

Book Review

Review Essay

Volume 25.2 (2020-2021)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO. They will be available in open access on this website as of November 2022 – one year from date of publication.

Articles

Review Essay

Volume 25.1 (2019 - 2020)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO.

Articles

Review Essay

Volume 24.2 (2019 - 2020)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO. They will be available in open access on this website as of July 2021 – one year from date of publication.

Table of Contents

Articles

Review Essay

Volume 24.1 (2019)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO.

Special Issue: Treaty Federalism

Co-Editors: Joshua Nichols, University of Alberta & Amy Swiffen, Concordia University

The implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) off ers a way to re-imagine what Indigenous self-determination and reconciliation might mean in Canada and elsewhere. It makes it possible to speak of Indigenous peoples as nations within a multinational democratic federation, rather than minority populations within a state. The papers in this issue, which were delivered at a Workshop held at the University of Alberta in May 2019, explore ‘treaty federalism’ which is a re-imagining of what we understand as sovereignty and the foundation of the Canadian state.

Table of Contents

Articles

UNDRIP, Treaty Federalism, and Self-Determination
   Michael Asch

UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Treaty Federalism in Canada
   James [Sa’ke’j] Youngblood Henderson

Indigenous Peoples and Interstitial Federalism in Canada
   Robert Hamilton

Constitutional Reconciliation and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
   Amy Swiffen

Legal Pluralism and Caron v Alberta: A Canadian Case Study in Constitutional Interpretation
   Ryan Beaton

Book Reviews

John Borrows, Larry Chartrand, Oonagh E. Fitzgerald, and Risa Schwartz, eds, Braiding Legal Orders: Implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, (Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), 2019)
   Nigel Bankes 

John Borrows, Law’s Indigenous Ethics, (University of Toronto Press, April 2019)
   Ferdinand Gemoh

Volume 23.2 (2018)

The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO.

To access the complete issue, please click here.

Individual Articles

“Our Time has Come”: Reconciliation in the Wake of Manitoba Metis Federation Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General)
Janique Dubois and Kelly Saunders

Section 16 of the Constitution Act, 1867: The Queen, the Capital, and Canadian Constitutionalism
Michael Da Silva and Andrew Flavelle Martin

Des Causes et des Conséquences du Dialogue Constitutionnel
Jean-Christophe Bédard-Rubin

Seven Conceptions of Federalism Guiding Canada’s Constitutional Change Process — How Do They Work, and Why So Many?
Dave Guénette

Review Essay
Proportionality’s Reductio ad Monitum:
Review Essay on Paul Yowell’s Constitutional Rights and Constitutional Design
G.T. Sigalet

Book Review
Yaniv Roznai, Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments: The Limits of Amendment Powers (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017)
Neliana Rodean

Volume 23.1 (2018)

Volume 22.3 (2017)

To access the full issue, please click here.

Articles

The Constitution as Muse? Four Poets Respond (Tacitly) to the World-View of The British North America Act (1867)
George Elliott Clarke

The Story of Constitutions, Constitutionalism and Reconciliation: A Work of Prose? Poetry? Or Both?
Jean Leclair

The Judicial Recognition of Indigenous Legal Traditions
Connoly v. Woolrich at 150
Mark D. Walters

Unpacking "Reconciliation": Contested Meanings of a Constitutional Norm
Hannah Wyile

Should Paramountcy Protect Secured Creditor Rights?
Saskatchewan v. Lemare Lake Logging in Historical Context
Virginia Torrie

BOOK REVIEW
Uncertain Accommodation: Aboriginal Identity and Group Rights in the Supreme Court of Canada
Dimitrios Panagos
(Vancouver: UBC Press, 2016)
Nnaemeka Ezeani