Institute of Parliamentary and Political Law

The Institute of Parliamentary and Political Law is a Canadian not-for-profit corporation, founded in February 2008.[1] The Institute engages in professional and educational activities aimed at interdisciplinary, comprehensive and comparative analysis of public affairs. The Institute is non-partisan, autonomous from any partisan political organizations or interests and does not engage in advocacy. It is based in Ottawa, Ontario and its national membership comes from the legal, public policy and administration, and political science communities.[2]

Subject Matter

Parliamentary and Political Law means the field of law, legal scholarship and legal practice relating to the functions and operations of parliamentary, governmental and judicial institutions and their respective officials.

Parliamentary Law means the body of law dealing with the establishment and functioning of parliamentary institutions, and includes the law of parliamentary privilege.

Political Law means the body of law dealing with the structure of the State and the processes of governing, with the application of legal, public policy and political instruments of governing, and with the impact of law on democratic governing.

Within the overall domain of public law, Parliamentary and Political Law is complementary to constitutional law and administrative law. As an interdisciplinary study, it is distinct from, yet linked to, political science, and public policy and administration.

The Institute (and through its Journal) specializes in the interdisciplinary, comprehensive and comparative analysis of these topics.

Publications and Programs

The Institute publishes The Journal of Parliamentary and Political Law three times a year, which is available through Carswell Thomson.

It also hosts a bi-annual conference, and The Third Law and Parliament Conference was held November 2009 at the University of Toronto.

Officers

gollark: It's a lower bound. The real figure is probably a lot more.
gollark: They have a GDP of $715 billion (~600 billion €) apparently, so I assume many times that.
gollark: -3, that is.
gollark: Succeeded by GPT-3, but OpenAI is not really giving anyone access to it and it's gigantic and hard to run.
gollark: It's a text generation model thing.

References

  1. See Commonwealth Law Bulletin, Volume 34, Issue 3 September 2008 , pages 685 - 690 for public announcement.
  2. See Corporations Canada - Letters of Patent, File Number 447384-1
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