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Title The democratic dilemma : reforming Canada's Supreme Court / edited by Nadia Verrelli
Published Montreal : Institute of Intergovernmental Relations : School of Policy Studies, Queen's University ; Montreal : McGill-Queen's University Press, [2013]
©2013

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  KL 221 F1 Ver/Ddr  AVAILABLE
Description xiii, 291 pages ; 23 cm
Series Queen's policy studies
Queen's policy studies.
Contents Appointment of Thomas A. Cromwell to the Supreme Court of Canada / Peter W. Hogg -- Should Canada have a representative Supreme Court? / Lorne Sossin -- Should Supreme Court judges be required to be bilingual? / Sébastien Grammond and Mark Power -- Respecting legal pluralism in Canada : Indigenous Bar Association appeals to Harper government to appoint an aboriginal justice to the Supreme Court of Canada / Indigenous Bar Association -- Indigenous Bar Association urges Prime Minister Harper to remove barriers to judicial appointments for indigenous judges / Indigenous Bar Association -- Intergovernmental relations and the Supreme Court of Canada : the changing place of the provinces in judicial selection reform / Erin Crandall -- The jurisprudence of "Canada's fundamental values" and appointment to the Supreme Court of Canada / F.C. DeCoste -- Supreme Court appointments : by Parliament, not PM, and shorter / Tom Kent -- Looking for the good judge : merit and ideology / Allan C. Hutchinson -- Reforming the SCC : rethinking legitimacy and the appointment process / Nadia Verrelli -- The legitimacy of constitutional arbitration in a multinational federative system : the case of the Supreme Court of Canada / Eugénie Brouillet and Yves Tanguay -- Réformer le processus de nomination des juges de la Cour suprême? / Andrée Lajoie -- Reform of the Supreme Court of Canada from within : to what extent should the Court weigh in regarding constitutional conventions? / Peter C. Oliver -- Reforming the Supreme Court : the one-court problem and the two-court solution / Peter McCormick -- The United Kingdom's new Supreme Court / Alan Trench -- Choosing the deciders : the Supreme Court nomination and confirmation process in the United States / Aman L. McLeod -- The Federal Constitutional Court of Germany : a central player in the federal state / Arthur Benz and Eike-Christian Hornig -- Constitutional Court appointment : the South African process / Yonatan T. Fessha -- The Court of Justice of the European Union : federalizing actor in a multilevel system / Achim Hurrelmann and Martin Manolov -- Judging Europe : drawing lessons from the European Court of Human Rights / Neil Cruickshank -- Contributions to a coherent and consistent judges' appointment process of a constitutional court : the case of the Supreme Court of Argentina / Jorge O. Bercholc -- The Supreme Court of Canada : a chronology of change / Jonathan Aiello
Summary The process used to select judges of the Supreme Court of Canada has provoked criticism from the start. Some observers argue the process - where the prime minister has unfettered discretion - suffers from a democratic deficit, but there is also disagreement regarding alternative methods of selection. This book explores the institutional features of the Court, whether the existing process used to select judges ought to be reformed, the overall legitimacy of the Court, as well as the selection and appointment processes of Supreme Court justices in other liberal democracies
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Text in English; abstracts in French
Subject Canada. Supreme Court.
Canada. Supreme Court -- Officials and employees -- Selection and appointment.
Judges -- Selection and appointment -- Canada.
Judicial process -- Canada.
Courts of last resort -- Canada.
Author Verrelli, Nadia, 1975-
Queen's University (Kingston, Ont.). Institute of Intergovernmental Relations.
LC no. 2013414773
ISBN 9781553392033
1553392035
Other Titles Reforming Canada's Supreme Court