Provincial statutory rights baseline in Alberta law.
Last evidence check means this project’s automated public-repository check; it is not a government audit, regulator audit, external audit, or assurance engagement.
001charter-rights-continuityThe Canadian Charter applies to Alberta today as part of Canada's constitutional order, while Alberta also has provincial rights and human-rights statutes.002charter-rights-continuityAn independent Alberta would need a new legal source for Charter-style rights continuity, including transition law, constitutional or statutory rights text, enforceable remedies, and courts with review powers.003charter-rights-continuityThe strongest pro-independence case is that Alberta could entrench familiar civil liberties in its own constitution or transition statutes and design rights institutions deliberately.004charter-rights-continuityThe strongest anti-independence / pro-federation case is that Charter rights, remedies, equality protections, language rights, Indigenous constitutional protections, and override rules should not be treated as continuing automatically without binding legal text and negotiated arrangements.005charter-rights-continuityThis topic remains uncertainty-labelled: high, because rights continuity would depend on constitutional negotiations, Alberta constitutional drafting, transition legislation, courts, tribunal design, Indigenous and minority-rights treatment, and recognition by Canada and other governments.