2019–2020 Departmental Results Report - Supplementary Information Tables

Raison d’être

The Department of Justice has the mandate to support the dual roles of the Minister of Justice and the Attorney General of Canada.

Under Canada’s federal system, the administration of justice is an area of shared jurisdiction between the federal government and the provinces and territories. The Department supports the Minister of Justice’s responsibilities for 53 statutes and areas of federal law by ensuring a bilingual and bijural national legal framework, principally within the following domains: criminal justice (including justice for victims of crime and youth criminal justice), family justice, access to justice, Indigenous justice, public law, and international private law.

The Department also supports the Attorney General as the chief law officer of the Crown, both in terms of the ongoing operations of government and of the development of new policies, programs, and services for Canadians. The Department provides legal advice to the Government and federal government departments and agencies, represents the Crown in civil litigation and before administrative tribunals, and drafts legislation and regulations.

Mandate and role

The Department of Justice Canada was officially established in 1868, when the Department of Justice Act was passed in Parliament. The Act sets out the roles and responsibilities of the Department as well as those of the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada.

The Department of Justice Canada fulfills three distinctive roles within the Government of Canada. It acts as:

The Department of Justice Canada has approximately 4,570 dedicated, full-time equivalent employees. Some 65 percent of Justice employees are located in the National Capital Region. The other 35 percent provide a strong national presence through a network of regional offices and sub-offices positioned across the country.

Almost half of departmental employees are lawyers. The other half comprises a broad range of professionals: policy analysts, paralegals, social scientists, program managers, communications specialists, executives and administrative services personnel.

For more information on Department of Justice Canada priorities, see the Minister’s mandate letter on the Prime Minister of Canada’s website.