The Conduct of Public Inquiries
The Conduct of Public Inquiries
The Conduct of Public Inquiries
by Ed Ratushny
Softcover 512 pgs.
Published: September 2009
ISBN-13: 978-1-55221-168-7
$85.00

The Conduct of Public Inquiries

Public inquiries have played a prominent role throughout Canadian history. Commissions of inquiry have contributed to the development of diverse public policies such as public broadcasting, universal health care, bilingualism and multi-culturalism, free trade, and employment equity. But it is in extraordinary circumstances that their unique investigative features are required: the conviction and imprisonment of innocent people; mining disasters; the murder of hundreds of Canadians through the bombing of an international flight; corruption on the part of government officials; or impropriety on the part of a former prime minister.

This book is the first comprehensive, integrated, and thorough exposition of the public inquiry as a governmental, legal and social institution. It examines the legal framework, the role of the commissioner and legal counsel, the rights and obligations of individuals who may be affected and its relationship to government, the media and the public. It analyzes the entire process from its inception through every stage to and after the final report.

Guidance and advice are provided at every step with graphic illustrations from past inquiries, such as the conduct of commissioners, ranging from exemplary to egotistical and arrogant. Difficult problems are analyzed such as the conflicting role of commission counsel, who must appear to be impartial but may have to engage in aggressive cross-examination. Practical solutions to such problems are also proposed.

Summary Table of Contents

Foreword 

Preface 

Table of Authorizing Statutes 

Table of Past Commissions of Inquiry 

chapter 1: Introduction 

chapter 2: Nature and Purpose of Commissions of Inquiry 

chapter 3: Some Canadian Commissions of Inquiry 

chapter 4: Establishing a Commission of Inquiry 

chapter 5: Role of the Commissioner 

chapter 6: Role of Counsel 

chapter 7: The Legal Framework 

chapter 8: The Conduct of Hearings 

chapter 9: Final Report 

chapter 10: Policy/Advisory Commissions 

Table of Cases 

Index 

“. . . launching a commission of inquiry is a risky process—a bit  like sending a ship out to sea. You don’t know where it will go, how long it will take, how much it will cost or what it will bring back. And trying to relocate a ship lost at sea and bring it back to port can be a costly experience (especially if the captain is not in a hurry to come home).”

N IPAC, Commissions of Inquiry in Canada: Lessons Learned from Recent Experience, Peter Larson Associates, Quoted at page 130

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