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A History of Law in Canada, Volume Two - Law for a New Dominion, 1867-1914 (Hardcover): Jim Phillips, Philip Girard, R Blake... A History of Law in Canada, Volume Two - Law for a New Dominion, 1867-1914 (Hardcover)
Jim Phillips, Philip Girard, R Blake Brown
R2,198 R1,570 Discovery Miles 15 700 Save R628 (29%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This is the second of three volumes in an important collection that recounts the sweeping history of law in Canada. The period covered in this volume witnessed both continuity and change in the relationships among law, society, Indigenous peoples, and white settlers. The authors explore how law was as important to the building of a new urban industrial nation as it had been to the establishment of colonies of agricultural settlement and resource exploitation. The book addresses the most important developments in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, including legal pluralism and the co-existence of European and Indigenous law. It pays particular attention to the Metis and the Red River Resistance, the Indian Act, and the origins and expansion of residential schools in Canada. The book is divided into four parts: the law and legal institutions; Indigenous peoples and Dominion law; capital, labour, and criminal justice; and those less favoured by the law. A History of Law in Canada examines law as a dynamic process, shaped by and affecting other histories over the long term.

A History of Law in Canada, Volume One - Beginnings to 1866 (Paperback): Philip Girard, Jim Phillips, R Blake Brown A History of Law in Canada, Volume One - Beginnings to 1866 (Paperback)
Philip Girard, Jim Phillips, R Blake Brown
R1,192 Discovery Miles 11 920 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A History of Law in Canada is an important three-volume project. Volume One begins at a time just prior to European contact and continues to the 1860s, Volume Two covers the half century after Confederation, and Volume Three covers the period from the beginning of the First World War to 1982, with a postscript taking the account to approximately 2000. The history of law includes substantive law, legal institutions, legal actors, and legal culture. The authors assume that since 1500 there have been three legal systems in Canada - the Indigenous, the French, and the English. At all times, these systems have co-existed and interacted, with the relative power and influence of each being more or less dominant in different periods. The history of law cannot be treated in isolation, and this book examines law as a dynamic process, shaped by and affecting other histories over the long term. The law guided and was guided by economic developments, was influenced and moulded by the nature and trajectory of political ideas and institutions, and variously exacerbated or mediated intercultural exchange and conflict. These themes are apparent in this examination, and through most areas of law including land settlement and tenure, and family, commercial, constitutional, and criminal law.

A Trying Question - The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition): R Blake Brown A Trying Question - The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition)
R Blake Brown
R1,617 R1,462 Discovery Miles 14 620 Save R155 (10%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The jury, a central institution of the trial process, exemplifies in popular perception the distinctiveness of our legal tradition. Nevertheless, juries today try only a small minority of cases. A Trying Question traces the history of the jury in Canada and links its nineteenth-century decline to the rise of the professional class.

R. Blake Brown shows that juries could be controversial, as they could be stacked and were often considered a nuisance by those who had to serve. With the legal profession's expansion, many saw them as amateur, ineffective, and unnecessarily expensive bodies that ought to be supplanted by those trained to sift through and correctly interpret evidence.

A Trying Question's fascinating history outlines the ways in which lay people became less involved in Canada's legal system and illustrates how judges, rather than jurors drawn from the community, would come to find verdicts in most court cases.

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