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 Peter Lyons, Chris Taylor


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By Authority of Parliament: The Constitutional Boundaries of Legislative Power in Canada


ISBN13: 9780228027850
To be Published: May 2026
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Country of Publication: Canada
Format: Hardback
Price: £36.00





The Supreme Court of Canada has affirmed that legislatures, including Parliament, are bound by the Constitution - even beyond the explicit text of the Charter and the British North America Act. Yet legislatures are increasingly asserting authority through rights-limiting laws and the use of the notwithstanding clause. This tension between parliamentary sovereignty and constitutional rights exposes a dangerous misconception: that Canadian legislators can abolish all of our fundamental rights with ordinary law.

By Authority of Parliament demonstrates that legislators do not have this power, and more importantly, they never did. Drawing on rich historical analysis, Ryan Alford traces the transformation of parliamentary sovereignty into an exaggerated parliamentary supremacy and uses habeas corpus to illustrate constitutional limits that governed in England, the United Kingdom, and Canada. Absolute rights and sovereignty appear to conflict only when sovereignty is redefined as supremacy, a shift justified by the influential constitutional theorist A.V. Dicey. As UK courts have recently turned away from this paradigm, Alford argues that Canadian courts should be equally forthright in recognizing that the Diceyan model has never described the Canadian constitutional order.

Essential reading for students, lawyers, and judges, this timely book will interest all those engaged in Canadian legal history and constitutional law.

Subjects:
Other Jurisdictions , Canada
Contents:
Preface / ix
Acknowledgments / xxi

PART ONE Canada's Incomplete Transition to Constitutional Supremacy / 3
1. Parliamentary Sovereignty after Patriation: Tentative Steps to Full Implementation of Constitutional Supremacy / 7
2. Modern British Approaches to Parliamentary Sovereignty: Preserving Legitimacy in Times of Change / 33

PART TWO The Intertwined Development of Sovereignty and Habeas Corpus / 61
3. The Constitutional Settlement of the Glorious Revolution: Parliamentary Sovereignty Under the Fundamental Law / 65
4. Habeas Corpus: The Great Writ's Limitation of Royal and Parliamentary Absolutism / 98
5. Disputing the Subordination of Fundamental Law to Sovereignty: North American Constitutionalism from the Glorious Revolution to Confederation, and Beyond / 129

PART THREE The Empire and Its Doctrine of Parliamentary Supremacy / 171
6. The New Imperialism: Indemnities and Parliamentary Supremacy / 174
7. Diceyanism: The Rule of Law Made Fit for Imperial Purposes / 193

Epilogue: Completing Patriation's Renewal of the Constitutional Architecture / 215

Notes / 225
Index / 249