Programme OS5k Local water governance abstract 125
Canadian Legal Framework of Water and Governance in the Prairie
Provinces
Author(s): Margot Hurlbert
Margot Hurlbert, B.Admin., LL.B., LL.M.
Asst. Professor
Joint
Appointment
Department of Justice Studies and
Sociology and Social Studies
University of
Regina
Regina, Saskatchewan
S4S 0A2
Margot.Hurlbert@uregina.ca
Keyword(s):
Article:
Poster:
Session: OS5k Local water governance
Abstract This paper will outline,
compare and contrast the jurisprudential framework of water law and water institutions in Canada against the
construction of the governance and rules surrounding water by Canadian citizens, water stakeholders, and
institutional employees. The premise of this research is critical legal pluralism, the difference between the
jurisprudential positivist view of the law as based on precedent and well established objective legal rules versus the
view of law as an institution and practice established and constituted by people, practices and decisions made in a
fluid, dynamic, and ever changing manner.
In the arid prairies, and specifically Saskatchewan and Alberta, water is
necessary for supporting not only agriculture, but also industrial considerations, and leisure and domestic use. These
multiple uses compete for water in times of scarcity. As such characteristics of both less developed and most
developed countries are existent in this region of Canada. This region of Canada has had significant droughts over
the past hundred years and is expected to suffer from periods of water shortage or conversely water overabundance
as a result of climate change in the future. In assessing the area’s ability to adapt to climate change, it is critical that
vulnerabilities be identified. Vulnerabilities include the inability of social structures, such as the legal structure and
framework of water, to respond to unforeseen, new circumstances.
In the face of these competing demands,
Canada’s water law evolves over hundreds of years from many different sources and influences including the riparian
water laws of Britain, where laws developed on a case by case basis in a land of relative water abundance. This
archaic and rigid water law has been modified and adapted (to a certain extent) to meet the needs of the western
Canadian situation; however many rules and principles remain. The objective of this research is to compare water
law and governance in Saskatchewan and Alberta, as found and evidenced in statutes, legal rules and norms (and
interpreted by the legal profession) and compare and contrast this with water governance as practiced by the water
community, stakeholders and citizens affected.
The methods utilized were:
(1) the legal framework of water
law and governance based on statutes, case law and judicial precedent was compiled;
(2) thereafter, interviews
were held with various members of the community, members of water non governmental organizations, and
government departments in relation to water and the environment. These interviews elicited not only participants’
view on what the legal framework was but also what the legal framework should be. In this way the research was
participatory and emancipatory.
The results of the interviews are of assistance in conclusions assessing and
developing water governance best practices and determining appropriate roles of government and civil
society.