PRB 00-04E
INTERNATIONAL
TREATIES:
CANADIAN PRACTICE
Prepared by:
Daniel Dupras
Law and Government Division
3 April 2000
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
NEGOTIATION
AND CONCLUSION OF INTERNATIONAL TREATIES:
CANADIAN PRACTICE
A. Authority
Respecting International Treaties
B. Negotiating
a Treaty
C. Making
and Signing a Treaty
D. Coming
into Effect, Implementation and Ratification of a Treaty
PARLIAMENTS
MAIN ACTIONS WITH RESPECT TO TREATIES
A. Review
of Canadian Foreign Policy
B. Oral
Questions
C. Tabling
of International Treaties
D. Approval
of Important Treaties by Resolution of Parliament
E. Tabling
of Various Reports
PARTICIPATION
BY THE PROVINCES
REFORM
OF THE PROCESS IN AUSTRALIA
CONCLUSION
APPENDIX
A: EXAMPLES OF ORDERS IN COUNCIL
APPENDIX
B: LIST OF INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
TABLED IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS SINCE 1966
INTERNATIONAL
TREATIES:
CANADIAN PRACTICE
INTRODUCTION
In Canada, debate on the
negotiation and adoption of international trade liberalization agreements
over the past 15 years has revealed that Parliament and Members of
Parliament play only a small part in the negotiation and ratification
of international treaties.
The executive branch of
the federal government in fact controls all stages of the process.
This control extends to the content of the negotiations, which are often
conducted in secret. Moreover, this secrecy is a significant factor
in the federal governments negotiating strategy. Nothing,
or almost nothing, is made public before the parties have reached an agreement
in principle on the content or even the wording of the treaty.
Parliaments role is
restricted to amending statutes in effect or passing new legislation where
necessary for the implementation of the treaty. Lastly, although
the provinces are usually kept informed of negotiations on trade agreements,
they are only minor participants and, except in rare instances, are completely
excluded from the decision-making process.
In this paper, the main
features of Canadian practice with respect to the negotiation and adoption
of international treaties are described. Also discussed are Parliaments
role in this field and the participation of the provinces in the implementation
of treaties. A final section describes the process in place in Australia.
NEGOTIATION
AND CONCLUSION OF INTERNATIONAL TREATIES:
CANADIAN PRACTICE
A. Authority
Respecting International Treaties
The division of legislative
powers set out in the Constitution Act, 1867(1)
does not specifically state whether the federal government or the provinces
have jurisdiction to enter into a treaty with a foreign country.
No provision of Canadas Constitution mentions any area of jurisdiction
that might be related to foreign affairs or international relations.
This is so because, when the Constitution Act, 1867 was passed
by Britains Parliament, Canada was still a colony of the British
Empire.
Although the Constitution
Act, 1867 resulted in the creation of a new country (the Dominion
of Canada), this did not immediately acquire all the international attributes
of sovereignty; its international personality was thus incomplete.
In 1867, the British Parliament reserved for the British Crown the power
to represent the Dominion of Canada internationally and to enter into
treaties with foreign countries on its behalf. Under section 132
of the Constitution Act, 1867, however, the federal government
was given responsibility for implementing in Canada treaties entered into
by the British Crown where they were applicable to that country.
The Government of Canada
gradually intervened on its own initiative in discussions relating to
the negotiation of international treaties and conventions(2)
and over the years the country increasingly took independent action in
its external affairs.(3)
After the First World War, the federal government acted on its own authority
internationally and the British authorities merely ratified the treaties
put before them. In 1931, under the Statute of Westminster,
Canada and a number of other British dominions, acquired full independence(4)
and with it authority to act internationally with all the attributes of
a sovereign state. Full power over foreign affairs was thus conferred
on Canada and section 132 of the Constitution Act, 1867 became
obsolete.
Although authority over
international relations is not conferred on the executive branch of the
federal government under any constitutional provision, it is recognized
that this power has devolved upon it.(5)
In countries like Canada that share the British tradition, international
relations are a prerogative of the Crown, which, in Canada, is exercised
by the federal executive branch of government as the Crowns representative.(6)
It should be noted that some authors believe that the provinces could
also enter into international agreements, at least in their own areas
of legislative jurisdiction.(7)
However, this issue exceeds the scope of this paper and will not be addressed
here.
It is widely held that the
head of state is the only person capable of representing Canada internationally
and the only person who has the power to sign international conventions
or treaties on its behalf. The reality is quite different, however.
Although the Governor in Council (Cabinet) retains final effective control
over the ratification of treaties, it may appoint any person it wishes
to negotiate and sign them. Apart from the Prime Minister, these
persons are usually the ministers, deputy ministers, diplomatic representatives
or negotiators of the Canadian government. As soon as the Governor in
Council approves a treaty entered into by Canada and a foreign country,
regardless of who has negotiated it, it becomes an international treaty,
provided it is also ratified by the other signatory countries.
A treaty entered into and
signed for and on behalf of Canada by a representative of the Government
of Canada and subsequently approved by the Governor in Council is binding
on Canada. Approval usually takes the form of an order in council.
Furthermore, the Governor in Council may approve the text of an international
treaty that has not yet been signed and designate a representative of
the Government of Canada to sign it on behalf of Canada. The mandate
of that representative must then be set out in the order in council.(8)
The ratification and signing
of an international treaty must not be confused with its coming into force,
which is established in the treaty itself or in an agreement between the
parties and is usually the date on which the ratification instruments
are exchanged or tabled. Thus, when all the necessary approvals
for its coming into force had been given, the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) became effective on 1 January 1994, as provided
for in Article 2203 of that agreement.
B. Negotiating
a Treaty
In accordance with the Department
of Foreign Affairs Act, the Minister of Foreign Affairs is responsible
for conducting the international negotiations to which Canada is a party.(9)
In current practice, however, the Department of Foreign Affairs does not
have a monopoly on negotiations with foreign states, but rather plays
a supervisory role.(10)
Consequently, negotiations on the environment are conducted by the Department
of the Environment, those on tax matters by the Department of Revenue,
and so on. A number of departments thus took part in the negotiations
on NAFTA and the WTO agreements,(11)
playing a role in their respective areas of responsibility. The
participation of the Department of Foreign Affairs in international treaty
negotiations, although constant, is more or less adapted to the needs
of the other departments.
Within the departments,
officials usually handle the discussions, with the ministers involved
to varying degrees. On some occasions, ministers may take part in
the negotiations, whereas on others they are merely informed periodically
on the progress or outcome. However, they are solely responsible
for the final decisions on the results of the negotiations and the content
of international treaties. Prior to being concluded, signed, and
ratified, a treaty must be approved by the Governor in Council.
In practice, where there
is an agreement on the text of the treaty, the negotiators verify the
wording of the agreement by initialling the various versions that exist
at the time. A treaty is often a long and complex text and it cannot
always be translated before the close of negotiations. While French
was for a long time the language of diplomacy, treaties today are usually
drafted in English, although they are commonly translated into other languages
to meet the needs of the parties. The WTO Agreements, for example,
were adopted in three languages (English, Spanish and French). In
Canada, in accordance with the Official Languages Act, government
documents, which include treaties, must be published in both official
languages. Although a treaty is concluded in only one language, it is
not signed until all versions have been finalized.
C. Making
and Signing a Treaty
Under Canadian law, the
fact that a treaty has been signed by Canadas representative is
not sufficient for it to come into force or be implemented. It must
go through other stages before it is approved by Cabinet. Once the
negotiators have agreed on the terms or text of the agreement, a minister
(usually the Minister of Foreign Affairs) requests the Governor in Councils
approval and at the same time submits an explanatory document setting
out the details of the agreement. Once approval is granted, the
treaty can be signed and eventually ratified.
A signing order designates
one or more persons who have a mandate to sign the treaty on behalf of
Canada and authorizes them to do so.(12)
In exceptional circumstances, a person who is not a representative
of the Government of Canada may be authorized to sign on Canadas
behalf.(13) The signing
of the treaty by Canadas authorized representative does not mean
that the treaty is in force or applicable to Canada but signifies the
signatory countrys agreement in principle to the treaty. In
cases requiring amendments to Canadian legislation, the treaty is not
ratified until such amendments or new legislation have been passed.
D. Coming
into Effect, Implementation and Ratification of a Treaty
Where amendments must be
made to Canadian legislation in order for a treaty to be implemented,
the ministers concerned give instructions for an implementation bill to
be drafted. After receiving Cabinet approval, the bill is tabled
in Parliament and goes through the parliamentary legislative process.
A distinction must be drawn
between the treatys international effective date and its effective
date for a signatory country such as Canada. As noted above, the
treaty normally states the terms and conditions necessary for it to come
into force. Before this can happen, the parties to the Agreement
must have completed their internal ratification procedures. For
example, technically, NAFTA could not have come into force if the three
signatory countries had not completed their ratification procedures and
exchanged ratification instruments by 1 January 1994.
In other cases, the effective
date is not a specified calendar date, but depends on the accomplishment
of formalities specified in the treaty. For example, a treaty may
provide that it will come into force once it has been ratified by a specific
number of signatories. The United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea, for example, had to be ratified by 60 signatory states
in order to enter into force.(14)
Although it had been signed by 119 states in 1982, it did not become
effective until 1994, 12 months after the sixtieth state had ratified
it.(15)
A treaty comes into force
on the date on which it applies to all ratifying parties. The effective
date for a specific country may differ. If the treaty permits accession,
this may be subsequent to the effective date for all parties, but it may
in no case be prior to that date. The effective date for a country
will be identical to that on which the treaty comes into force for all
parties if the country has by then completed its ratification procedures
and served notice to that effect. Where the treaty is already in
effect, the date of ratification or notification of ratification determines
or may help determine the effective date for a country that subsequently
accedes to it.(16)
Within Canada, ratification
usually takes the form of a document establishing that the formalities
for the coming into force and implementation of the treaty have been completed
and that Canada agrees to be bound by the treaty. More formally,
ratification takes the form of an exchange of memoranda between the signatory
countries and the tabling of a ratification instrument when the treaty
is deposited. The document may also specify the date on which the
treaty comes into force for Canada.(17)
Where the treaty requires
amendments to Canadian legislation, the implementing Act usually contains
a provision under which the treaty is approved.(18)
In most cases, this approval is stated very simply, for example by the
expression the agreement is approved.(19)
Although it is rare for
an implementing Act not to be passed by Parliament, this can happen.
For example, in 1988, the Canadian Senate refused to pass the Canada-United
States Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act,(20)
thereby triggering an election. A similar bill was passed shortly
afterwards by a new Parliament. Where a bill that must be passed
in order to implement a treaty is not passed, Canada cannot ratify that
treaty.
It should be noted, however,
that a number of treaties requiring Canada to adopt specific standards
are not tabled in Parliament for implementation. These are cases
where the government feels that legislation is already consistent with
Canadas international obligations or that the object of the treaty
does not require new statutory provisions. Accordingly, no amendments
are made to legislation in effect and no new legislation is passed by
Parliament. For example, before ratification of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, Parliament did not pass legislation for its implementation
and approval.(21)
PARLIAMENTS
MAIN ACTIONS WITH RESPECT TO TREATIES
As noted above, the legislative
implementation of certain treaties gives Parliament its only opportunity
to have decision-making power over the coming into force of a treaty in
Canada. Parliament may, however, intervene at various times in the
international relations of the Canadian state. A few such instances
are cited below.
A. Review
of Canadian Foreign Policy
Either directly or through
the House of Commons Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International
Trade and the Standing Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, Parliament
regularly considers various aspects of Canadas foreign policy.
For example, during the thirty-fifth Parliament, the House of Commons
Committee conducted studies on such subjects as circumpolar cooperation;
Canadas strategy for International Business Development; the expansion
of NATO; Canadas policy on nuclear non-proliferation and the control
and reduction of weapons; issues pertaining to relations between Canada
and the United States; Bill C-81 (An Act to implement the Canada-Chile
Free Trade Agreement and other related agreements); the report of the
International Development Research and Policy Task Force (Connecting
with the World); and the program of the Group of Seven Summit in Halifax
(in particular the reform of international financial institutions). In
a number of cases, detailed reports were submitted to Parliament, requiring
the government to respond and to state its opinions on the subject.
Treaties are made in accordance
with Canadas foreign policy. From the moment Parliament reviews
that policy and makes recommendations, it can exercise a certain influence
over the development and making of international treaties.
B. Oral
Questions
Question periods and the
various other times when parliamentarians can question the government
are all opportunities for them to gather information on the status of
negotiations being conducted by the Canadian government for the conclusion
of international treaties. In this way, parliamentarians may learn
what negotiations are being conducted and why and which foreign states
are involved.
This procedure obviously
has its limits. While it is possible to learn that negotiations
are taking place, it is more difficult to obtain specific information
on their actual content. The confidentiality or secrecy under which
international treaty negotiations are conducted means that it is usually
quite difficult to determine the content of negotiations and the terms
of a possible treaty before it is concluded or signed.
C. Tabling
of International Treaties
In his 1968 book Canadian
Treaty-Making, A.E. Gotlieb stated that it appeared to be common
in Canada for the government to table sporadically in Parliament copies
of international treaties that had come into force for Canada. Mr. Gotlieb
gives examples of this practice up to 1967; it seems to have been common
until the early 1990s and, following a break of a few years, to have been
resumed in 1999. Appendix B contains a list of treaties tabled
in Parliament over the past 40 years.
In this way, parliamentarians
can ascertain the treaties that have come into force for Canada since
the last tabling but which they have not been required to implement themselves.
This government practice is entirely voluntary; it was not required in
the past, and is not required now by any statutory or constitutional provision.
To make this practice official, in 1999 a Private Members bill was
introduced in the House of Commons which, if passed, would require the
government to table in Parliament, at least 21 days prior to ratification,
every treaty it intended to ratify.(22)
Moreover, most treaties
signed by Canada are published in the Canada Treaty Series.
This collection does not appear to be tabled in Parliament. In addition,
all tax treaties are published in schedules to the Acts that implement
them, and parliamentarians can see them there.
D. Approval
of Important Treaties by Resolution of Parliament
Mr. Gotlieb also describes
a second practice, whereby certain, so-called important(23)
treaties are approved by parliamentary resolution. This practice
began in 1926, when Prime Minister Mackenzie King made a declaration
on the subject, and ended in 1966, when the last resolution of approval
was passed by Parliament.(24)
Anne-Marie Jacomy-Millette,
who considered this point in her 1971 book Lintroduction et lapplication
des traités internationaux au Canada, elaborated further on the issue
of importance.(25)
In her examples of parliamentary resolutions that approved treaties, she
included only one more resolution than Mr. Gotlieb.
Ms. Jacomy-Millette
contended that important treaties may be divided into seven
classes: peace treaties; defence treaties (including those imposing
military sanctions); treaties on the imposition of economic sanctions;
treaties on Canadas territorial jurisdiction (land and maritime
frontiers, air space and near-earth space); trade treaties; treaties resulting
in public expenditures (economic and technical aid programs, food aid
programs, developing country loan programs); and treaties pertaining to
international organizations. She also noted that no written constitutional
or legislative standard requires the government to submit treaties to
Parliament, particularly during negotiations.(26)
Ms. Jacomy-Millette
also mentioned that, contrary to what some of her predecessors had said,
the practice of approving treaties by resolution was no longer very
common.(27) She emphasized
that over the years authorities had relied less and less on approval by
resolution. In fact, the practice has by now (2000) not merely declined,
but can be said to have disappeared; there have apparently been no treaty
approvals by resolution since 1966.(28)
If adopted, the Private
Members bill referred to above (C-214) would also re-establish and
provide a legal basis for the practice of parliamentary approval of important
treaties; it would prohibit such treaties from being ratified by the Government
of Canada unless they had first been approved by resolution of the House
of Commons.(29)
E. Tabling
of Various Reports
Under certain international
treaties, the signatory states have an obligation to produce periodic
reports on relevant activities or on action they have taken to comply
with the treaties. For example, Canada must produce a report each
year describing the measures it has taken to comply with the Convention
on the Rights of the Child. Copies of these reports are usually
tabled in Parliament.
In some cases, statutory
provisions require the government to table certain reports or documents
in Parliament. These reports may subsequently be reviewed by parliamentary
committees if one of the Chambers so decides. For example, section 42
of the Old Age Security Act requires that social security agreements
entered into with foreign countries be tabled in Parliament.
PARTICIPATION
BY THE PROVINCES
The conclusion of an international
treaty is one thing, compliance with it another. The Government of Canada
is the only Canadian government that has an international personality
and it is accordingly the only one responsible for international treaties
in effect in Canada. As it does not hold all the necessary powers
to implement those treaties, however, there are serious weaknesses in
its ability to discharge this responsibility.
In Canada, Parliament and
the provincial legislative assemblies may pass legislation in areas where
they have jurisdiction under the Constitution of Canada. This division
of legislative power is provided for mainly in sections 91 and 92
of the Constitution Act, 1867. As specifically stated in the 1937
Privy Council decision in Labour Conventions, this power also extends
to the implementation of international treaties concluded by the Canadian
state.(30) Whenever a treaty
or part of a treaty concerns an area of provincial jurisdiction, the relevant
provisions may be implemented only by the provincial legislative assemblies.
As noted above, a treaty
is implemented when the signatory state adopts legislative or other measures
enabling it to comply with the treatys provisions. A state
that is already in compliance with the provisions of a treaty will not
have to adopt new measures in order to implement it. Where it wishes
to become a party to the treaty, the state need only ratify it and issue
the ratification instrument.
If Canada were to make undertakings
that it could not implement because they fell within provincial jurisdiction,
it would risk a loss of international credibility and being found in default
of its international obligations. For nearly three decades now,
since the Tokyo Round, the provinces have taken part in the process of
negotiating international trade agreements and the federal government
has consulted the provinces in this regard.(31)
At these meetings, discussion does not focus solely on matters under provincial
jurisdiction, but also covers areas of federal jurisdiction.(32)
This has not led to provincial participation in decision-making, however.
Even though certain aspects of the negotiations focus on provincial jurisdiction,
the federal government has always refused to include the provinces in
the decision-making process.
To limit Canadas liability
where a treaty, even partially, concerns an area of provincial legislative
jurisdiction, that treaty usually contains a federal clause.
To varying degrees, depending on the purpose of the treaty and the wording
of its articles, the federal clause informs all the parties that the Government
of Canada may have certain difficulties in implementing the treaty because
to do so it will have to secure the cooperation of the Canadian provinces.
The inclusion of this clause limits the responsibility of the Government
of Canada should even one province refuse to pass or amend its legislation
in accordance with the provisions of a treaty.
The effect of the federal
clause is ambiguous, however. On the one hand, it might be claimed
that it constitutes an obligation of means for the Government
of Canada, but, on the other hand, it might be claimed that it constitutes
an obligation of result. There is an enormous difference
between these two types of obligation. Suppose the Government of
Canada was unable to secure the cooperation of a single province for the
implementation of an international treaty under domestic law. Under
an obligation of result, the Government of Canada might still be liable
under another portion of the treaty. Under an obligation of means,
this would not be the case; to avoid its international responsibility,
the Government of Canada would need to establish only that, despite all
its efforts or negotiations, it had found it impossible to secure the
cooperation of at least one province.
Paragraph XXIV(12)
of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is considered a typical
example of an obligation of means. This provision reads as follows:
XXIV:12 Each member
shall take such reasonable measures as may be available to it to ensure
observance of the provisions of this agreement by regional and local
governments and authorities within its territory.
However, the text of article 105
of NAFTA is somewhat different:
105. The Parties
shall ensure that all necessary measures are taken in order to give
effect to the provisions of this Agreement, including their observance,
except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, by state and provincial
governments.
Whereas the GATT Agreement
states that members shall take all reasonable measures available
to it, NAFTA states they shall ensure that all necessary measures
are taken in order to give effect, which is more imperative.
Some authors see the text
of NAFTA as imposing an obligation of result on the Government of Canada.(33)
If this interpretation is correct, should the Government of Canada not
implement every provision of NAFTA (because of lack of provincial agreement),
it would be in default and could be subject to an application for dispute
settlement and potential reprisals by the United States and Mexico.
As the Government of Canadas default would in fact be due to the
countrys federal structure and not to its refusal to act or to comply
with NAFTA, the inclusion of such a harsh condition in the treaty is somewhat
surprising.
Thus, the Government of
Canada should ensure that the provinces take part in the negotiation of
international treaties in order to prevent the country from being in default
internationally as a result of difficulties caused by a lack of cooperation
between the two levels of government. An agreement on a consultation
and decision-making mechanism for the conclusion of international treaties
would facilitate the treaty implementation process.
REFORM
OF THE PROCESS IN AUSTRALIA
In recent years, Australias
Parliament has examined its role in the conclusion and implementation
of international treaties to which Australia is a party. This review
stemmed mainly from two legal decisions on the effect of treaties on the
Australian state.(34) In
the first decision, Teoh, an Australian court held that the ratification
of an international convention created a legitimate expectation that the
executive branch would act in accordance with that convention. In
the second decision, Toonen, a United Nations human rights committee
found that Australia was in default of its obligations under the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
In December 1994, Australias
Senate asked its legal and constitutional affairs committee to study the
issue. In its report, tabled in November 1995,(35)
the committee described concerns that had been expressed about the treaty-making
process(36) and offered 11 recommendations.(37)
In its response to the report, the Government of Australia announced it
intended to apply new treaty-making measures and to expand Parliaments
role in this area.(38) The Australian
government will no longer ratify treaties unless it is satisfied that
ratification is in the national interest. In Australias Parliament,
the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties was established in May 1996 and
from now on all treaties will be tabled in Australias Parliament
at least 15 sitting days prior to their ratification and referred
back to the Committee for consideration.(39)
With respect to relations between the Australian Commonwealth and States,
the Treaties Council, also created in the context of these reforms, is
the consultation body for all matters pertaining to international treaties.
As may be seen from the
Web site of the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties of Australias
Parliament, the Committee has been very active since 1996(40)
and appears to review all treaties tabled in Australias Parliament.
In August 1999, the Committee
published as a report the transcript of a seminar on the role of the parliaments
of the Australian States in international treaty making.(41)
Mindful of the fact that the Australian States and Territories should
participate in the adoption and implementation of international treaties,
seminar participants drew a number of conclusions from their exchanges.
For example:
-
The
States and Territories of Australia must be better informed and participate
to a greater extent in the treaty adoption process.
-
The
parliaments of the States and Territories must ensure that their government
provides them with relevant information on treaties and even establish
treaty review committees.
-
The
work of the treaty committees of the States and Territories would
complement that of the Joint Committee on Treaties, which could consult
them as necessary.
As may be seen, the trend
is toward greater participation in the process with respect to international
treaties at all levels of Australias government.(42)
CONCLUSION
The new developments in
Australias procedure with respect to international treaties demonstrate
one option for greater parliamentary participation in the treaty-making
process in a federal system. Canada is currently facing the same
dilemma that Australia faced a number of years ago, and study of the Australian
experience may provide useful guidance should Canada choose to initiate
reforms.
There is growing evidence
that the Canadian people no longer want their government to negotiate
agreements in secret so that they are faced with a fait accompli.
The failure of the draft Multilateral Investment Agreement and the impossibility
of starting new multilateral trade negotiations during the Seattle meeting
proved that the people of the industrialized countries no longer intend
to be silent on international treaties that might affect them. They
want their opinions to be heard, and a closed door government process
provides limited opportunities for such input.
Parliament has a traditional
public consultation function and, by its very nature, a greater openness
to public opinion. A redefined role for Parliament in negotiating,
concluding, implementing and ratifying international treaties would seem
to be an extremely important element of any reformed treaty-making process,
in order to ensure that parliamentarians would no longer be excluded from
an international law-making process that has significant effects on domestic
law and state sovereignty in this era of globalization.
APPENDIX
A
EXAMPLES OF ORDERS IN
COUNCIL
APPENDIX
B
LIST OF INTERNATIONAL
AGREEMENTS
TABLED IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS SINCE 1966(43)
23 February 1966:
M. D. S. Macdonald: With the permission of the House, I would
like to table English and French copies of a certain number of international
agreements which the Government of Canada has recently concluded.
13 March 1968:
Certain number of agreements recently concluded by the government.
29 October 1968:
Certain number of agreements recently signed by Canada, subject to ratification,
or which have come into force for Canada.
3 July 1969:
Certain international agreements which Canada has recently signed, subject
to ratification or which are already in force in Canada.
17 December 1970:
Certain number of international agreements which Canada has concluded
over the past 16 months.
16 December 1971:
26 international agreements which Canada has ratified over the
past 14 months.
10 May 1973:
Texts of 37 international agreements which Canada has signed since
the last time I filed similar agreements.
21 March 1974:
In accordance with tradition, texts of the international agreements
which Canada has recently concluded.
13 February 1975:
Text of certain international agreements currently in force for Canada.
22 October 1975:
(1) Prior to its ratification, the new extradition treaty negotiated
with the United States of America, which was signed in Washington on
3 December 1971, the text of which was subsequently amended through
an exchange of memos on 28 June and 9 July 1974. The treaty
essentially combines in a single text some six treaties dating
back to 1842; (2) texts of 32 international agreements.
9 June 1976:
Text of the new extradition treaty concluded with Sweden.
17 February 1977:
Certain number of international agreements which recently came into
force and which concern Canada.
1 June 1977:
Certain number of international agreements concerning Canada which have
come into force over the past 12 months.
24 November 1977:
Documents concerning the Italy-Canada agreements on social security.(44)
8 November 1978:
Agreement on Social Security between Canada and Italy, signed at Toronto,
17 November 1977.
10 July 1980:
Three extradition treaties (Federal Republic of Germany, Denmark and
France).
17 July 1980:
Texts of a certain number of international agreements now in force in
Canada. Printing of the list of agreements in an annex to the Debates
of the House of Commons.
15 March 1984:
A supplementary agreement which the Government of Canada has concluded
with that of the United States concerning social security.
5 February 1985:
An agreement on social security between the Government of Canada and
that of Belgium.
16 December 1988:
Agreement on Social Security between Canada and Iceland (signed at Gimli,
25 June 1988, as well as order in council P.C. 198801760,
dated 25 August 1988, declaring its coming into force) and Agreement
on Social Security between Canada and Australia (signed at Canberra,
4 July 1988, as well as order in council P.C. 1988-2067, dated
15 September 1988, declaring its coming into force).
4 April 1989:
Agreement on Social Security between Canada and Iceland (signed at Gimli,
25 June 1988, and order in council P.C. 198801760, dated 25 August
1988, declaring its coming into force) and Agreement on Social Security
between Canada and Australia (signed at Canberra, 4 July 1988,
as well as order in council P.C. 1988-2067, dated 15 September
1988, declaring its coming into force).
2 November 1989:
Supplementary Agreement amending the Agreement on Social Security between
Canada and the Kingdom of the Netherlands, signed at Ottawa, 26 July
1989, as well as order P.C. 1989-2123, dated 19 October 1989,
declaring its coming into force.
24 May 1990:
Certain number of international agreements already in force.
12 June 1990:
Agreement on Social Security between Canada and the Republic of Cyprus,
signed at Ottawa, 24 January 1990, as well as order P.C. 1990-865,
dated 10 May 1990, declaring its coming into force.
18 June 1990:
Extradition Treaty between the Government of Canada and the Government
of the Republic of France.
18 March 1991:
Agreement on Social Security between Canada and Ireland, signed at Ottawa,
29 November 1990, and order P.C. 1991-442, dated 7 March
1991, declaring its coming into force.
23 May 1991:
Agreement on Social Security between Canada and Ireland, signed at Ottawa,
29 November 1990 and order P.C. 1991-442, dated 7 March
1991, declaring its coming into force.
30 September 1991:
Agreement on Social Security between Canada and Australia, signed at
Ottawa, 11 October 1990, and order P.C. 1991-1497, dated 13 August
1991, declaring its coming into force and Agreement on Social Security
between Canada and the Republic of Malta, signed at Toronto, 4 April
1991, as well as order P.C. 1991-1498, dated 13 August 1991,
declaring its coming into force.
13 May 1992:
Copy of order P.C. 1992-818, dated 30 April 1992, concerning
the coming into force of the Protocol of Convention on Social Security
between Canada and Luxembourg, signed at Ottawa, 6 February 1992.
26 March 1993:
Copy of order P.C. 1993-546, dated 23 March 1993, concerning
the coming into force of the Agreement on Social Security between Canada,
Jersey and Guernesey.
4 May 1994:
Copy of order P.C. 1994-679, dated 28 April 1994, concerning
the coming into force of the Agreement on Social Security between Canada
et the Confederation of Switzerland, signed at Ottawa, 24 February
1994.
14 February 1995:
Copy of order P.C. 1995-137, dated 31 January 1995, concerning
the Protocol amending the Agreement on Social Security between Canada
and the Republic of Finland, signed at Ottawa, 2 November 1994,
copy of order P.C. 1995-138, dated 31 January 1995, concerning
the coming into force of the Agreement on Social Security between Canada
and the Republic of the Philippines, signed at Winnipeg, 9 September
1994 and copy of order P.C. 1995-139, dated 31 January 1995,
concerning the Codified Arrangements respecting Social Security between
Canada and the United Kingdom.
29 September 1995:
Copy of order P.C. 1995-1584, dated 19 September 1995, concerning
the Arrangement on Social Security between Canada and the United States
of Mexico.
26 October 1995:
Copy of order P.C. 1995-1727, dated 17 October 1995, concerning
the Agreement on Social Security between Canada and the Republic of
Italy.
8 November 1995:
Copy of order P.C. 1995-1829, dated 31 October 1995, concerning
the Agreement on Social Security between Canada and the Republic of
Austria.
13 April 1999:
International treaties coming into force for Canada in 1996 and 1997,
a list of which is also tabled.
12 May 1999:
International treaties coming into force for Canada in 1995, a list
of which is also tabled.
9 June 1999:
International treaties coming into force for Canada in 1994, a list
of which is also tabled.
10 June 1999:
International treaties coming into force for Canada in 1993, a list
of which is also tabled.
26 November 1999:
International treaties coming into force for Canada in 1991 and 1992,
a list of which is also tabled.
29 November 1999:
International treaties coming into force for Canada in 1989 and 1990,
a list of which is also tabled.
(1)
Since 1982, the British North America Act, 1867, 30-31, Vict.,
c. 3 (U.K.), passed by the British Parliament, has been entitled
the Constitution Act, 1867.
(2)
For more information on the development of Canadas international
personality, see J.-C. Bonenfant, Le développement du statut
international du Canada, in Paul Painchaud, Le Canada
et le Québec sur la scène internationale, Centre québécois de relations
internationales, Quebec City, 1977, p. 31-49. See also René Morin,
Le Canada et les traités : notes sur le développement constitutionnel
du Canada, Syndicat des imprimeurs du Saguenay, Chicoutimi, 1926.
(3)
Prior to the early 1990s, Canada traditionally used the term external
affairs in reference to its foreign affairs. Out of respect for
the British Crown, which, within the Empire, reserved the use of the
term foreign affairs for itself, Canada refrained from using
the term foreign or its French-language translation (étranger/étrangère);
hence the use of the terms external, external affairs
and external relations (extérieur, affaires
extérieures and relations extérieures). P.W. Hogg,
Constitutional Law in Canada, Carswell, Toronto, 1992, p. 290-291;
J.-C. Bonenfant (1977), p. 43, note 25.
(4)
Except with respect to amendments to Canadas Constitution, which
remained under the British Parliaments jurisdiction until 1982.
(5)
Anne-Marie Jacomy-Millette, Lintroduction et lapplication
des traités internationaux au Canada, Librairie générale de droit
et de jurisprudence, Paris, 1971, p. 102. A.E. Gotlieb, Canadian
Treaty-Making, Butterworths, Toronto, 1968, p. 4. Peter Hogg,
Constitutional Law of Canada, Loose Leaf Edition, Carswell, Toronto,
1997, Chapter 11.
(6)
The Statute of Westminster did not determine whether the federal
government held sole authority over external affairs or whether that
jurisdiction was shared with the provinces. In this respect, it complied
with the division of legislative authority provided for in the Constitution
or as interpreted by the courts. This paper will not address the
theory that the prerogative is shared between the Governor General and
the lieutenant governors of the provinces (see Lorne Giroux, La
capacité internationale de provinces en droit constitutionnel canadien,
Les Cahiers de Droit, 1967-1968, Vol. 9, p. 241). According
to this theory, the provinces have a partial international personality
that is related to their areas of legislative jurisdiction. Under
the dominant doctrine, however, the provinces do not have such powers
in the international arena. The agreements they may enter into with
foreign governments are administrative agreements: P.W. Hogg,
Constitutional Law in Canada, Carswell, Toronto, 1992, p. 298.
(7)
See mainly J.-Y. Morin, La conclusion daccords internationaux
par les provinces canadiennes à la lumière du droit comparé, Canadian
Yearbook of International Law, Vol. 3, 1965, p. 126.
(8)
For Canadian practice in this field, see Jean-Yves Grenon,
De la conclusion des traités et de leur mise en uvre au
Canada, Canadian Bar Review, Vol. 40, 1962, p. 151.
(9)
Department of Foreign Affairs Act, R.S.C., c. E-22, paragraph 10(2)(c).
(10)
This description of current practice with respect to treaties is based
extensively on the main points in the testimony of Department of Foreign
Affairs officials before the Sub-committee on Trade Disputes of the
Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade on 12 February
1997. See Issue 15 of the Sub-committees evidence.
(11)
Agreements resulting from the multilateral trade negotiations of the
Uruguay Round establishing the World Trade Organization.
(12)
The importance of a treaty directly affects who is authorized to sign
it. Although the treaty may be signed by an official who has
received authorization, this is usually the duty of a minister.
The most important treaties are signed personally by the Prime Minister.
See in Appendix A, orders in council 1994-537 and 1999-332.
(13)
The person authorized to sign the treaty need not be a government official
or representative. See in Appendix A order 1999-1490 authorizing
the directors of Teleglobe Inc. to sign for and on behalf of the Government
of Canada the Operating Agreement relating to the International Telecommunications
Satellite Organization INTELSAT.
(14)
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, United Nations,
Vol. 1833, p. 3; 21 I.L.M. 1245 (1982).
(15)
Although it signed the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea in 1982, Canada has still not ratified it. It did, however,
ratify the Agreement for the purposes of the implementation of the provisions
of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (10 December
1982) respecting the preservation and management of fish stocks that
travel both in and out of exclusive economic areas (straddling stocks)
and high migratory fish stocks. See order in council 1999-1317.
(16)
See order in council 1996-86 in Appendix A.
(17)
See orders in council 1991-2442, 1994-2160 and 1995-2205 in Appendix A.
(18)
See Income Tax Conventions Implementation Act, 1996, S.C. 1997,
c. 27, ss. 4, 16 and 22; Canada-Chile Free Trade Agreement
Implementation Act, S.C. 1997, c. 14, s. 9; North American
Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act, S.C. 1993, c. 44,
s. 10; World Trade Organization Agreement Implementation Act,
S.C. 1994, c. 47, s. 8.
(19)
See North American Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act, S.C.
1993, c. 44, s. 10.
(20)
Bill C-130: Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement Implementation
Act, 2nd session, 33rd Parliament.
(21)
Canada ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child on
13 December 1991 (RTC 1992/3).
(22)
On 14 October 1999, Daniel Turp, the member for Salaberry,
tabled in the House of Commons Bill C-214, an Act to provide for
the participation of the House of Commons when treaties are concluded,
which touches on a number of aspects of the conclusion and ratification
of international treaties.
(23)
A.E. Gotlieb, Canadian Treaty-Making, 1968, Butterworths,
Toronto, p. 15-17.
(24)
On 6 May 1966, the House of Commons approved by resolution the
Agreement between the Government of Canada and the Government of the
United States of America on automotive products; this had been signed
on 16 January 1965. The Senate approved the treaty on 30 June
1996.
(25)
Anne-Marie Jacomy-Millette, Lintroduction et lapplication
des traités internationaux au Canada, LGDJ, Paris, 1971, p. 118-128.
(26)
Ibid., p. 110.
(27)
Ibid., p. 114.
(28)
The difficulties involved in searching for treaty approval resolutions
in the Debates of the House of Commons and Senate should be stressed.
The index of the Debates does not necessarily show treaty approval resolutions
under a single heading and indexing methods often change from session
to session. Resolutions are at times found under international
agreements or international treaties, but more often
under the title of the international convention approved by resolution.
In addition, no reference is usually made to this kind of convention
under the headings international agreement or international
treaty. To be sure that no parliamentary approval by resolution
or any tabling of a treaty was overlooked would involve a detailed search
of all the journals and debates of the House of Commons and the Senate.
(29)
The bill defines important treaty as any treaty (a) whose
implementation requires (1) the enactment of an Act of Parliament,
(2) that Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada be invested with
new powers, or (3) the imposition of a tax by Parliament; (b) imposing
a substantial financial obligation, whether direct or conditional, on
Canada; (c) concerning the transfer of a part of the territory
of Canada or any change to the boundaries of Canada; (d) under
which Canada undertakes to impose economic or military sanctions, whether
direct or conditional, against a State; (e) concerning the territorial
jurisdiction of Canada, including jurisdiction by Canada over any area
of the sea or air; (f) concerning international trade or investment
or Canadas place in the world economy; or (g) concerning
the participation of Canada in international institutions, including
the transfer of jurisdiction to such institutions.
(30)
A.-G. Canada v. A.-G. Ontario (1937), A.C. 326 (P.C.).
In this case, the Government of Canada had approved three international
conventions on labour relations and Parliament had passed statutes in
order to implement the conventions in Canada. This legislation
was disputed by, among others, some provinces that saw this as an intrusion
into their areas of legislative jurisdiction. The British Privy
Council ruled that Parliament could not pass such statutes, even to
implement Canadas international obligations, because the labour
relations field was the exclusive jurisdiction of the provinces.
(31)
David Cook, The Millennium Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations:
The Provinces and Treaty Making - A Submission to the Standing Committee
on Foreign Affairs and International Trade, 25 April 1999,
p. 26.
(32)
Ibid., p. 27.
(33)
I. Bernier, LAccord de libre-échange Canada-États-Unis
et la Constitution, Trade-Offs on Free Trade - The Canada-U.S.
Free Trade Agreement, Marc Gold and David Leyton-Brown (ed.), Carswell,
Toronto, 1988, p. 100; H. Scott Fairley, Jurisdictional
Limits on National Purpose: Ottawa, The Provinces and Free Trade with
the United States, ibid., p. 109.
(34)
For more information, see Australia, Department of the Parliamentary
Library, Treaty-Making Options For Australia, Current Issues
Brief No. 17, 1995-96, Parliamentary Research Service. (Accessible on
the Web site of the Australian Parliamentary Research Service at
http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/cib/1995-96/96cib17.htm.)
(35)
Australia, The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, Trick
or Treaty? Commonwealth Power to Make and Implement Treaties,
report of the Senate Legal and Constitutional References Committee,
November 1995. (Accessible on the Web site of the Parliament of
Australia at http://www.aph.gov.au/senate/committee/legcon_ctte/treaty/index.htm.)
(36)
These concerns were as follows: (1) the impact of treaties
on the Australian federal system; (2) the sovereignty of
the nation, the degree of consultation preceding the signing and
ratification of treaties; and (3) the respective roles of
Parliament, government and the executive branch in the treaty
conclusion process.
(37)
These recommendations were as follows: (1) provide
the public with information on the treaties to which Australia
is a party and on the means used to implement treaties; (2) require
the government to report to Parliament annually on action taken
to implement treaties; (3) prepare an information document
on the treaties under review and provide access to that document
in all public libraries; (4) finance a project whereby the
government would provide, free of charge over the Internet, the
full texts of certain multilateral international agreements, explanatory
documents concerning those agreements and the decisions of the
international bodies which interpret them; (5) finance a
project for publishing information on the meaning and interpretation
of treaties, including interpretative decisions and negotiation
reports; (6) increase government efforts to identity and
consult groups that may be affected by treaties and expert groups
on the subject or on its application; (7) replace the Standing
Committee on Treaties with a Treaties Council, which would be
established preferably by legislation; (8) pass legislation
requiring that treaties be tabled at least 15 sitting days
prior to their coming into force; (9) establish, by legislation,
a joint parliamentary committee on treaties with broad powers;
(10) insert in that legislation an obligation to provide
a study on the impact of the treaty; and (11) refer legislation
requiring Parliaments approval back to the proposed committee
on treaties for consideration and study.
(38)
W. Taylor, Member of Parliament, President, Joint Standing
Committee on Treaties, Trick or Treaty - An Australian Perspective,
Speech to the Conference on the Internationalization of Communities
at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, 28 November
1996.
(39)
Australia, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Government
Announces Reform of Treaty-Making, Press Release, 2 May
1996. (Accessible on the Departments Web site at http://www.dfat.gov.au/media/releases/foreign/1996/fa29.html.)
See also Taylor (1996).
(40)
The Joint Committees Web site is:
http://www.aph.gov.au/house/committee/jsct/index.htm.
(41)
The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, Report 24
- A Seminar on the Role of Parliaments in Treaty Making, Joint
Standing Committee on Treaties, Canberra, August 1999.
(42)
See also: Commonwealth of Australia, Review of the Treaty-Making
Process, Canberra, August 1999. This is a review of the treaty
adoption procedure which was developed by the Government of the
Commonwealth of Australia and has been in place since 1996 (available
at:
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/dfat/reports/review_treaty_making.html.)
(43)
The following international agreements tabled in the House of
Commons are described in very general terms. We provide a few
examples of the phraseology used. On very rare occasions, a list
of the agreements tabled was produced with the notice of tabling
and that list was reproduced in an appendix to the Debates (17 July
1980). There are very few indications as to the exact number of
agreements tabled in this way in the House of Commons.
(44)
The agreements on social security entered into by the government
with foreign governments must be tabled in Parliament in accordance
with section 41 of the Old Age Security Act (R.S.C.,
1985, c. O-9).
|