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F. L. Morton
B.A. (Colorado College), M.A., Ph.D (U of Toronto)
Comparative judicial process, constitutional law and civil liberties in
Canada, United States and France
BOOKS INCLUDE: The Charter Revolution and the Court
Party, with Rainer Knopff; Morgentaler v. Borowoski: Abortion, The Charter
and the Courts;, Charter Politics, with Rainer Knopff; Law, Politics and
the Judicial Process in Canada; and Federalism and the Charter: Leading
Constitutional Decisions: A New Edition, with Peter Russell and Rainer
Knopff. Convenor of Research Committee on Comparative Judicial Studies
Group (International Political Science Association). Recipient of 1995
Bora Laskin Fellowship in Human Rights Research
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POLITICS:
In June, 2004, Ted won the Progressive Conservative Partys nomination
for the new constituency of Foothills-Rocky View (west of Calgary), and
in November of the same year was elected its first MLA winning 62% of the
votes cast.
Since his election, Ted has been appointed Chairman of the Regulatory
Review Secretariat, a member of the Public Accounts Committee and a member
of the Select Committee for Review of the Conflict of Interests Act. He
also sits on the Government Caucus Standing Policy Committee (SPC)
responsible for Energy, Environment and Sustainable Resources. In June,
2005, the Calgary Herald gave Ted the highest grade of all new Calgary-area
MLAs and rated him Most likely to succeed.
Before entering provincial politics, Ted was a vocal critic of the Meech
Lake (1987) and Charlottetown (1992) Accords. He was an early supporter
of the Reform Party. In 1998, Ted won the Reform Party nomination for
the Alberta Senate election and was one of the two Senators-in-waiting
elected by Albertans. In 2001, Ted worked in Ottawa as the parliamentary
Director of Policy and Research for the Canadian Alliance Party. That
same year, he was one of a group of concerned Albertans who authored the
Alberta Agenda, a manifesto that calls on Alberta to use all
of its constitutional powers to reduce the influence of the Federal government
on the lives and pocketbooks of Albertans. In 2003, Ted spoke on the More
Alberta, Less Ottawa agenda at town-hall meetings and service club
luncheons across Alberta.
ALBERTA: 1978-2004
In 1981, Ted received an offer from the University of Calgary and the
Mortons moved to Alberta. For the past 23 years, Ted has taught in the
political science department at the U of C. He was promoted to Full Professor
in 1992. Bambi has taught French and other subjects for the Calgary Board
of Education since 1993. Their three children attended French-immersion
schools in the Catholic system and were actively involved in minor hockey,
baseball, and Young Canadians. Ted coached baseball teams for Bowridge
Little League for seven years and also Varsity Community Association.
Ted and Bambi became Canadian citizens in 1993. The Mortons are members
of St. Pius parish in Calgary. In 1990-92 Ted served as Vice-Chairman
of the Executive Committee of St. Marys College.
Ted has published five books and over fifty scholarly articles. Two of
his books have won awardsthe 1992 Alberta Writers Guild award
for the Best Non-Fiction book and runner-up for the 2001 Donner Book Prize
for the best book on Canadian public policy. Ted was a co-founder of the
Canadian Law and Society Association in the 1980s and served as an elected
officer in the International Political Science Association from 1991 to
2000. He speaks French as well as English, and has been a Visiting Professor
at universities in France, Quebec, Australia, Colorado and Connecticut.
In 1995 Ted was the recipient of the Bora Laskin Fellowship in Human Rights
and in 2001 was listed in MacLeans Magazine as one of the most popular
professors at the U of C. Teds political columns have appeared regularly
in the National Post, the Calgary Herald, the Globe and Mail and the Calgary
Sun.
TORONTO: 1973-78
From 1973 to 1978, the Mortons lived in Toronto, where Ted studied at
the University of Toronto and received his Masters and Ph.D. in political
economy. Their first two children were born in Toronto. In 1978, he accepted
a teaching position at Assumption College outside of Boston.
UNIVERSITY AND EUROPE: 1967-73
In 1971, Ted graduated with a B.A. (and Phi Beta Kappa honours) from Colorado
College. During university, Ted was active in the anti-Vietnam war effort;
co-founded a campus wing of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP); and was president of his fraternity. He spent
his third year of university studying in Aix-en-Provence, France where
he met his future wife, Bambi. After graduation, Bambi and Ted traveled
and worked in Europe for 18 months, including six months on a kibbutz
in Israel. (Ted jokes that working on a kibbutz cured him forever of Sixties-style
socialism.)
BEGINNINGS: 1949-1967
Ted Morton was born in Los Angeles in 1949 and moved to Wyoming in 1952,
where his father worked in the oil and gas exploration business. Growing
up in Wyoming, Ted developed his life-long love for the outdoors, and
still actively enjoys skiing, hiking, hunting and fishing.
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