The Institutional Memory Canada Cannot Afford to Lose

Contributing Writer · 13 February 2026

Canada's constitutional order depends on more than legal form. It depends on institutional memory: the practical inheritance of precedent, limits, and hard-learned judgment that cannot be replaced by innovation alone.

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13 February 2026

The Institutional Memory Canada Cannot Afford to Lose

Contributing Writer

Canada's constitutional order depends on more than legal form. It depends on institutional memory: the practical inheritance of precedent, limits, and hard-learned judgment.

6 February 2026

Federalism as an Education in Limits

Contributing Writer

Federalism is not only a constitutional architecture. It is a civic pedagogy that trains governments and citizens to act responsibly under conditions of plural legitimacy.

8 January 2026

Judicial Continuity and Public Trust

Research Contributor

Doctrinal development must remain publicly legible as principled reasoning rather than elite improvisation responsive to temporary pressure.

30 October 2025

Municipal Governance and the Missing Tier

Contributing Writer

Canadian political language still treats municipalities as administrative units when many now carry front-line responsibilities that demand constitutional seriousness.