Introduction
- Sources of Canadian Law = laws passed by Parliament and the provincial legislatures, English common law, the civil code of France and the unwritten constitution that we have inherited from Great Britain
- Combined all above = Magna Carta / Great Charter of Freedoms (1215 AD)
- Habeas corpus = Right to challenge unlawful detention by the state (English Common Law)
- Constitution of Canada amended to include Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1982)
- Fundamental freedoms + Additional rights
- Mobility rights, Aboriginal People's Rights, Official Language Rights and Minority Language Educational Rights, Multiculturalism
- Responsibilities = Obeying the law, taking responsibility for oneself and one’s family, serving on jury, Voting, Volunteering, Protecting/Enjoying heritage and environment
- Defending Canada = foreces.ca / cadets.ca for young people
History of Canada (Part 1 / 2)
- Peace, Order, and Good Government comes from British North America Act (1867)
- Songwriters called Canada "Great Dominion"
- Founding peoples = Aboriginal, French, British
- Aboriginal people migrated from Asia thousands of years ago.
- Territorial rights were first guaranteed through the Royal Proclamation of 1763 by King George III
- 1800 - 1980 => Aboriginal children in residential schools, Schools were poorly funded, students abused, Aboriginal language and cultural practices were prohibited. In 2008, Ottawa formally apologized to former students.
- Aboriginal people = 3 groups | First Nations (65%), Metis (30%), Inuit (4%)
- 'Indian' refers to all Aboriginal people who are not Inuit or Métis. Term no longer used. Now they are called 'First Nations'.
- About half of First Nations people live on reserve land in about 600 communities | Remaining off the reserve in urban centers
- Inuit, means "The People" in Inuktitut language live in Arctic. Knowledgeable about land, sea, wildlife
- Metis = people of mixed Aboriginal and European ancestry. Majority in Prairie provinces. Their dialect = Michif (French + English speaking backgrounds).
- John Buchan | 1st Baron Tweedsmuir | popular Governor General of Canada (1935-40) | Said "Immigrant groups should retain their individuality and each make its contribution to the national character." at Canadian Club of Halifax, 1937.
- Today, Anglophones = 18 million, 7 million Francophones (majority live in Quebec) - 1 million live in Ontario, NB & Manitoba
- NB is the only official bilingual province
- Acadians = descendants of French colonists, began settling in the Maritime provinces in 1604.
- Between 1755 and 1763 (war b/w Britain and France), 2/3rd of Acadians were deported from their homeland. This is known as "Great Upheaval".
- Quebecers = People of Quebec (French speaking majority). Descendants of 8500 French settlers
- The House of Commons recognized in 2006 that the Quebecois form a nation within a united Canada.
- One million Anglo-Quebecers have a heritage of 250 years | vibrant part of Quebec fabric
- basic way of life in English-speaking areas established by English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish settlers, soldiers and migrants from the 1600s to 20th century
- Canada = "Land of immigrants"
- From 1970s, most immigrants have come from Asian countries.
- Chinese is second most 2nd most spoken at home.
- Vancouver = 13% speak Chinese at home | Toronto = 7% speak Chinese at home
- Majority of Canadians = Christians
- Canada's diversity includes gay, lesbian | All protection under the law including marriage
- Marjorie Turner-Bailey of Nova Scotia = Olympian, descendant of black Loyalists, escaped slaves & free men, fled to Canada in 1780s from America.
- Huron-Wendat of the Great Lakes region, like the Iroquois = farmers and hunters
- Cree and Dene of the Northwest = hunter-gatherers
- Sioux = Nomadic, following bison herds.
- Inuit = Lived off Arctic wildlife
- West Coast natives = preserved fish by drying and smoking
- Warfare was common among Aboriginal groups for resources, land & prestige
- Many aboriginals died because of European diseases they didn't have immunity to
- Vikings from Iceland, colonized Greenland 1000 years go reached Newfoundland & Labrador
- The remains of their settlement L’Anse aux Meadows = World heritage site
- European exploration began 1497
- John Cabot = first to draw a map of Canada’s East Coast.
- Jacques Cartier, voyages across Atlantic, claiming land for King Francis I of France
- Jacques Cartier = first European to explore St. Lawrence River, set eyes on present-day Québec City & Montreal
- Iroquoian word 'Kanata' means village
- By 1550s, name "Canada" began appearing on maps
- Samuel de Champlain = In 1608, built a fortress in Quebec City
- French and the Iroquois made peace in 1701
- French and Aboriginal people collaborated in the vast fur-trade economy, demand for beaver pelts in Europe
- Jean Talon, Bishop Laval, and Count Frontenac built a French Empire from Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico
- Sir Guy Carleton (Lord Dorchester) defeated American invasion of Quebec in 1775
- King Charles II of England = In 1670, granted Hudson’s Bay Company exclusive trading rights over the watershed draining into Hudson Bay
- Voyageurs / coureurs des bois = Montreal-based traders | men who travelled by canoe | formed strong alliances with First Nations
- Battle of the Plains of Abraham at Québec City = 1759 | British defeated French marking the end of France’s empire in America
- Commander of both Armies (Brigadier James Wolfe and the Marquis de Montcalm) were killed in the war
- After the war, Britain renamed the colony the “Province of Quebec.”
- Canadiens / Habitants = French speaking Catholic people
- Quebec Act = 1774 | Passed by British parliament | allowed religious freedom for Catholics and permitted them to hold public office
- Quebec Act restored French civil law while maintaining British criminal law
- In 1776, 13 British colonies to the south of Quebec declared independence and formed the United States.
- People loyal to the Crown = “Loyalists" fled oppression and moved to Nova Scotia and Quebec
- Joseph Brant led thousands of Loyalist Mohawk Indians to Canada
- In 1792, some black Nova Scotians were given poor land, moved on to establish Freetown, Sierra Leone
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