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'This book addresses an important but under-examined issue of institutional design within our system of government - whether Canadians are well-served by having two distinct levels of trial courts in each province. The contributors represent an impressively broad range of constituencies - court administrators, the judiciary, legal scholars, political scientists, criminologists, politicians, and government lawyers - and they bring to bear an equally impressive range of approaches - historical, empirical, sociological, political, constitutional, and comparative. Peter H. Russell has done a…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
'This book addresses an important but under-examined issue of institutional design within our system of government - whether Canadians are well-served by having two distinct levels of trial courts in each province. The contributors represent an impressively broad range of constituencies - court administrators, the judiciary, legal scholars, political scientists, criminologists, politicians, and government lawyers - and they bring to bear an equally impressive range of approaches - historical, empirical, sociological, political, constitutional, and comparative. Peter H. Russell has done a masterful job as editor of organizing the different contributions into a coherent and well-structured whole. He also offers his own insightful analysis of the topic in the concluding chapter.'-Robin Elliot, Faculty of Law, University of British Columbia
Autorenporträt
Peter H. Russell is a professor emeritus of political science at the University of Toronto.