Secured transactions law in Canada - Significant achievements, unfinished business and ongoing challenges

Introduction: Secured transactions law in all of Canada's provinces and territories is today consolidated in a modern statutory framework: the Personal Property Security Act (PPSA) in the common law provinces and territories, and the Civil Code regime in Quebec. The road to reform was a long on...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Walsh, Catherine, Wood, Roderick J., Cuming, Ronald C.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/bd854974-b34e-41b2-a7e7-51e2c179239e
https://doi.org/10.7939/R3BN9XH57
Description
Summary:Introduction: Secured transactions law in all of Canada's provinces and territories is today consolidated in a modern statutory framework: the Personal Property Security Act (PPSA) in the common law provinces and territories, and the Civil Code regime in Quebec. The road to reform was a long one, spanning a 25-year period beginning with Ontario's proclamation of the PPSA in 1976 and ending in its adoption by Nunavut and the Northwest Territories in 2001. In Quebec, reform came about as part of a much larger initiative: the implementation of a new Civil Code in 1994. With the fundamental reform push now behind us, it seems timely to examine both the past and the future. What has worked, what unfinished business remains and what lies on the horizon?