Classification Outline (MS Word file)
The Internet Archive, a 501(c)(3) non-profit, is building a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, it provides free access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public.
Search with Law & Canada -
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Journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Ontario
http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=%28journals%29%20AND%20creator%3A%28Ontario.%20Legislative%20Assembly%29%20AND%20subject%3A%22Ontario%20–%20Politics%20and%20government%20Periodicals%22
Search with Law & Ontario -
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See (2008) 82 ALJ 614 – http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?issn=0004-9611
updated April 22, 2010
ECO: Early Canadiana Online
http://resources.library.ubc.ca/767/
For detailed information about Early Official Publications, see http://www.canadiana.ca/en/eco_detail#early%20official%20pubs
Excerpt:
Acts (or Statutes): An act or statute is a bill that has passed through the required stages in the legislature, and has subsequently become law. The Nova Scotia acts in 1758 to the Federal acts introduced in 1900 are digitized.
Bills: A bill is a draft of a proposed law. The Early Official Publications provides a selection of bills through ECO. For bills introduced before 1860, 1st readings have been digitized, and where there are no 1st readings available, the 2nd reading has been digitized. Prior to 1860, relatively few of the 1st readings still exist. For 1860-1867, Early Official Publications digitized 1st readings of bills only. For 1867-1873 and 1898-1900, first readings of bills only have been digitized. There are no bills within the Early Official Publications project for the years 1874-97. The Early Official Publications project provides about 5000 pre-1901 bills through ECO. Seventy percent of these are Province of Canada (1841-1867) bills.
Committee Reports: Since the early 1800s, legislatures in Canada have created specialized committees to study matters of provincial or national importance. Such a committee is a group of parliamentarians from either the upper chamber (Senate; Legislative Council), the lower chamber (House of Commons; Legislative Assembly; House of Assembly; General Assembly), or both the upper and lower. The committees consider matters, including bills, referred to it by the chamber/s. The committee reports (for example, many of those for the Province of Canada 1841-1866) were at times published as monographs which in turn may have also been reissued in one or more of the Journals, Appendices to the Journals, or the Sessional Papers. In those cases when the monograph was re-published within such a publication, Canadiana.org avoided duplication by choosing to digitize the committee report as it appeared in one of the Journals, Appendices to the Journals, or the Sessional Papers. The committee reports that survive only in typescript format were not digitized.
Court Rules: These are the rules and orders of practice for various courts in Canada from the early 1800s up to 1900.
Debates: They are the printed record of the spoken proceedings in the legislature. For many of the jurisdictions, debates were not published in the earlier years. For example, official debates were not published for the Senate until 1871 and for the House of Commons until 1875. In pre-1867 Canada, only the Maritime provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island published official debates. Canadian Heritage funding was provided for the digitization of the Federal Debates.
Journals (& Appendices to Journals): The Journals are the official records of the decisions and transactions of the legislature. What makes the Journals of immense value to a broad range of researchers are the hundreds of detailed reports that are often appended to them. These reports cover a diverse range of subjects such as international affairs, education, immigration and colonization, commerce, banking and trade, transportation (railway, roads and canals), natural resources (minerals, fishery and lumber), the legal system, military affairs, technology, science and health care. Canadian Heritage funding was provided for the digitization of the pre-Confederation journals of the legislative assemblies, as well as the Federal Journals of the House of Commons.
Ordinances: These are legislative enactments produced by a governor, acting unilaterally or with the advice of a council, in the absence of an elected legislative body. A number of these are digitized, most notably those from Quebec during the period 1764-1791 and Lower Canada, 1838-1841.
Official Publications from France and Great Britain that relate to the governance of Canada: This collection consists of over 1000 documents such as acts, bills, correspondence and reports. These records are significant, since much of Canada.s early history was largely determined by decisions made in either of the French or British parliaments. The collection includes over 600 19th Century British Parliamentary papers that directly relate to Canada. These papers are very similar to Canada’s Sessional Papers and they too cover a wide range of topics. Also included are more than 100 Arrest du Conseil d’État as set by France to regulate life in 17th and 18th century Canada.
Regulations: These are a form of delegated legislation when Parliament, by statute, confers upon an outside authority the right to make rules and regulations which have the force of law. Over 150 regulations, beginning in the late 1700s up to 1900, are digitized.
Royal Commission Reports (or Commissions of Inquiry Reports): These commissions are traditionally established to investigate extraordinary problems, or to solicit informed opinions on controversial matters and to set government policy. The Royal Commission Reports were at times published both as stand alone documents (i.e. monographs) and as part of the Sessional Papers. In those cases when the monograph was re-published within the Sessional Papers, Canadiana.org avoided duplication by choosing to digitize the committee report as it appeared in the Sessional Papers. The Royal Commission Reports that survive only in typescript format were not digitized.
Sessional Papers: These are reports that the House of Commons orders to be created in order for them to carry out their business. These reports can originate from a number of sources, and they include reports made by Parliamentary Committees and various government departments. In all respects, the Sessional Papers are a significant part of the Early Official Publications database. Over 400 volumes (consisting of over 300,000 pages) of Sessional Papers covering the years 1860 to 1900 are digitized and available through ECO. These reports cover a diverse range of subjects such as international affairs, education, immigration and colonization, commerce, banking and trade, transportation (railway, roads and canals), natural resources (minerals, fishery and lumber), the legal system, military affairs, technology, science and health care.
Treaties and Conventions: A formal agreement or contract between two or more nations or sovereigns that is formally signed and ratified by the supreme power of each state. There are various types of treaties.treaties regulating trade, establishing territorial boundaries, forming alliances or making peace. Dozens of these treaties that directly or indirectly affect Canada are digitized, from the peace treaty between France and First Nations in 1666, to the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, to agreements relating to the Alaska boundary dispute in the 1890s.
Canadian Abridgment Shelving Diagram – Click here.
Revised November 22, 2007
British Columbia Debates are online at http://www.leg.bc.ca/hansard/8-9.htm (1970- )
Useful Sources for Historical BC Statutes & Debates
Check the index for the Journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of British Columbia [LAW LIBRARY (level 4) & Other Locations: J110.L5 J8] which covers 1872 to 1971.
Note: The Journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of British
Columbia are edited versions (not verbatim transcripts) of what transpired in the BC Legislature.
There are no verbatim BC Hansard pre-1970, and the ones for 1970-71 are not as thorough as the Hansards for 1972-onwards.
Two more resources re: BC Debates:
1. Sessional Clipping Books: Newspaper Accounts of the Debates, 1890-1972
[KOERNER LIBRARY microforms (Floor 2): AW1 .R5782];
2. Debates of the Legislative Assembly, 1970 – :
[LAW LIBRARY (level 4) & KOERNER LIBRARY stacks: J110.L5 D42]; online at http://www.leg.bc.ca/hansard/8-9.htm
Marjorie C. Holmes, Publications of the Government of British Columbia, 1871-1947
[KOERNER LIBRARY microforms (Floor 2): Z1373.5.B7 H62 1950] may list government committee reports. (Law Library’s copy is missing.)
Newspaper sources that may be useful…
British Columbia Newspaper Index (1991 – )
This index is a continuation of the B.C. Newspaper Index [KOERNER LIBRARY microforms (Floor 2): AW1 R5065] and BCARS (British Columbia Archives and Records Services) Newspaper Index (1858-1900) [KOERNER LIBRARY microforms (Floor 2): AW5 P76 B33]
B.C. Newspaper Index (1900-1990)
[KOERNER LIBRARY microforms (Floor 2): AW1 R5065]
- There are 3 relevant titles:
1) B.C. Legislative Library Newspaper Clipping Index. [microform]
Victoria, B.C. : Precision Micrographic Services Ltd.
2) British Columbia. Provincial Library.
Newspaper index. Microform. Victoria.
3) British Columbia. Legislative Library. Newspaper Index [microform]. –
Vancouver, B.C. : Precision Micrographic Services, [1983- ]
LEGISinfo on the Parliamentary website at http://www.parl.gc.ca/LegisInfo
It includes information on bills introduced in the last three sessions of
Parliament, i.e. the 1st, 2nd and 3rd sessions of the 37th Parliament, from Jan 29, 2001-
It is a really useful service, particularly to the ordinary citizen, who can now follow a bill without having to invest too much time learning to navigate the debates, journals, etc.
Available via LexisNexis Academic – Shepard’s® Citations, a product of Shepard’s Company, a partnership, provides the ability to check citations, find parallel citations, and view subsequent history of the cite case or statute, and the treatment accorded it by subsequent cases.
To shepardize is to look up (a case citation) in Shepard’s Citations esp. in order to check the status of the case, parallel citations, or the use of the case in other jurisdictions. (It is equivalent to what Canadians call “noting up a case”).
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