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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Challenging Exile

Japanese Canadians and the Wartime Constitution

In September 1945, Canada proposed exiling Japanese Canadians to Japan, a country devastated by war. Thousands who had experienced internment and dispossession were now at risk of banishment.

In Challenging Exile, Eric M. Adams and Jordan Stanger-Ross detail the circumstances and personalities behind the exile. They follow the lives of families facing government orders that uprooted them from their homes, stripped them of their livelihoods and possessions, and proposed to exile them from Canada. And they analyze the court case in which lawyers and judges grappled with the meaning of citizenship, race, and rights in times of war and its aftermath.

Unfolding in a context of global conflict, sharpened borders, and racist suspicion, the story told in Challenging Exile has enduring relevance for our own troubled times.


384 pages | 68 halftones, 4 maps, 6 illus. | 6 x 9 | © 2025

Law and Society

History: General History

Law and Legal Studies: The Constitution and the Courts

Political Science: Race and Politics


Table of Contents

Preface / Audrey Kobayashi

Introduction

1 Making Home

2 Contested Citizenship

3 The Cascade of Injustice

4 Choosing Wrongs

5 Fighting Dispossession

6 Conceiving Exile

7 Signing Day

8 Ordering Exile

9 At the Supreme Court of Canada

10 Shifting Ground

11 Experiencing Exile

12 Traditions in the Twilight

13 At the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council

14 Exile and the Constitution

Epilogue

Notes; Selected Bibliography; Index

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