After World War I, Canada and other Commonwealth countries felt the need for more independence. The Statute of Westminster was part of the process to grant full independence to many of the Commonwealth states. There was discussion between provincial governments of Canada vs. the federal government of Canada about the effect of The Statute of Westminster on the Canadian Constitution.
Canadian Confederation happened on July 1st, 1867, however, this was not a declaration of independence as Canada was part of the British Empire. The Statute of Westminster in 1931 set the country as an independent realm with allegiance to the Crown as the 'Dominion of Canada'. The current Head of the House of Windsor remains the monarch of Canada.
Canada became totally autonomous from Britain in 1986
The colonies where separated send depended on England Canada became a country in July1,1867.
After the war, many loyalists moved to Canada. But most did not want to live in a French culture.To avoid problems , Great Britain divided the land into two colonies, upper canada and lower canada.
WWI- Russia, Britain, France, Italy, Japan, Serbia, Belgium, Canada. WWII- Soviet Union, Britain.
The significance of The Statue of Westminster is that it recognized Canada's full independence from Great Britain and gave the country the ability to be involved in foreign affairs and have a passing its own legislation without approval from Great Britain.
For all practical purposes in 1931 with the passing of the Statute of Westminster. Purely technically, a handful of things like the national flag were nominally subject to approval by Britain till 1982, but this was a formality.
The statute of Westminster and the Chanak crisis
it was important because it symbolized canada's independence from britain
For the act of union (1840) it is MDCCCXL For the Canadian Confederation (1867) it is MDCCCLXVII For the Statute of Westminster (1931) it is MCMXXXI
Canada chose to enter WWII independently from Great Britain partly as a display of its sovereignty, but there were other factors that influenced this decision. Canada had automatically entered into WWI when Great Britain declared war, as Canada was then a dominion of the British Empire. However, since the signing of the Statute of Westminster in 1931, Canada had gained legislative independence from Great Britain. As a result, when Great Britain declared war on September 1, 1939, Canada was not automatically a part of that declaration. The Canadian parliament debated the issue, and a formal state of war was declared by Canada on September 10, 1939.
That would be the Statute of Westminster, a result of the Balfour Declaration of 1926.
Great Britain
Four territories were proclaimed the Canadian Confederation in 1867, yet it still fell under British dominion. It was not until 1931 that the Statute of Westminster stated Canada's independence. The Canada Act in 1982 finally cut all ties with Britain.
In 1867, with the union of three British North American colonies through Confederation, Canada was formed as a federal dominion of four provinces. This began an accretion of additional provinces and territories and a process of increasing autonomy from the United Kingdom, highlighted by the Statute of Westminster in 1931, and culminating in the Canada Act in 1982 which severed the vestiges of legal dependence on the British parliament. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada
Australia, Canada and South Africa.
In 1931, the British parliament passed the Statute of Westminster, a law that gave formal recognition to all countries with Dominion status full independence, stating that they were bound by no laws but their own. This gave the dominions complete independence, but in some cases complete independence in some areas were not achieved until later. ex: The Supreme court of Canada was the Privy Council in London until 1949. The power to amend the Canadian constitution remained in the hands of the British until 1982 because the provincial and federal governments couldn't agree upon the subject. Answer In order to make this full independence a complete reality, the Dominions - Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa - had to pass their own legislation on constitutional matters in order to ensure that there were no legal gaps. The delay referred to above in the case of Canada was exceptionally long.