Featured Commentary

12-04-25-Cooper Image

Helping Easterners Understand the Alberta Election

By: Dr. Barry Cooper

Alberta (along with the other Western provinces) really does have long-term economic and geopolitical interests distinct from those of Canadians living in the St. Lawrence Valley. Until our fellow-citizens in Ontario and Quebec accept Alberta leadership, Premier Alison Redford’s pledge to build bridges is an exercise in futility or worse, capitulation. Barry Cooper looks at the Alberta election and explains what it means…

OUR MOST RECENT ISSUE:

Volume 6 - Issue 1: Courts and Charter

issue cover
  • Interview with former Supreme Court of Canada judge John (Jack) Major

    Interview with former Supreme Court of Canada judge John (Jack) Major

    Interview with former Supreme Court of Canada judge John (Jack) Major By Chris Schafer
    Read More »
  • Charter Hyperbole: The New Politics of Heresy

    Charter Hyperbole: The New Politics of Heresy

    Law, especially rights-entrenching constitutional law, has become a new sacred text, allegedly defining the legitimate community and putting apostates beyond its pale. In Canada, the pulpit hyperbole that cast Wilfrid Laurier as a heretic in late 19th Century Quebec has been replaced by the “Charter Hyperbole” now used to demonize Stephen Harper.
    Read More »
  • Free? Democratic? Society?: Re-examining Section 1 of the Charter

    Free? Democratic? Society?: Re-examining Section 1 of the Charter

    All rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Charter are subject to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society. This article explains how the courts have been using the words "free and democratic society" as a hollow feel good notion devoid of any specific meaning to substitute the analysis of what a society founded on democratic principles and made up of free individuals should be with utilitarian tests designed to achieve the greatest good for the greatest number of people at the expense of the least misery for the smallest number of people.
    Read More »
  • Civilization: The West and The Rest

    Civilization: The West and The Rest

    In this wide-ranging account, the economic historian Niall Ferguson sets out to explain the rise of Western civilization, as well as defend its achievements from the enervating effects of multiculturalism, post-modernism and post-colonialism. Ferguson argues that the economic, social and political institutions of the West still provide the best hope for guaranteeing lives which are meaningful and rewarding, and for solving the problems the modern world faces.
    Read More »
  • The Charter at 30: Charter Jurisprudence that Went off the Rails

    The Charter at 30: Charter Jurisprudence that Went off the Rails

    In the 30 years since the adoption of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, any cautious optimism that freedom loving Canadians had in 1982 has proven to be unfounded as the courts have continuously enabled an ever-expanding state to the detriment of freedom.
    Read More »