Some Problems of Canadian Federalism
Harold W. Stoke
American Political Science Review, 1933, vol. 27, issue 5, 804-811
Abstract:
The Civil War in the United States was a sobering object lesson to the fathers of Canadian federation. In drafting the British North America Act of 1867, they sought to forestall the development of those problems which the experience of their neighbor to the south had shown to be incidental to the federal system of government. The division of powers between central and local governments has been the rock on which most federations, sooner or later, have foundered, and Canadians sought to escape a similar fate by three different political devices.
Date: 1933
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