canada
The human rights codes and constitutional instruments protect against discrimination on the basis of:
- "place of origin" (British Columbia, Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Nunavut);
- "nationality or national origin" (Manitoba)
- "national" origin (Quebec, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Yukon, Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Canadian Human Rights Act)
- "national origion" and "place of origin" (New Brunswick)
- "nationality" (Newfoundland and Labrador; Northwest Territories).
Your question is whether any of these have been interpreted to prohibit discrimination on the basis of province of origin.
Province of residence has been rejected as a prohibited ground of discrimination
Multiple human-rights bodies have interpreted their enabling legislation to not include province of residence as a ground of discrimination.
E.g. Dobbin v. Canada (Department of Fisheries and Oceans), 2005 FC 1020; Gardezi v. Insurance Corporation of British Columbia, 2010 BCHRT 262; Re Algonquin College and Ontario Public Service Employees' Union, 1985 CanLII 5355 (ON LA); Peplinski (Re), 2018 ONMIC 12 (CanLII): "Place of origin does not mean province of residence."
The Supreme Court of Canada has held that province or place of residence is not a ground of discrimimation under the Charter (Siemens v. Manitoba (Attorney General), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 6).
Province of origin has not been recognized as a prohibited ground of discrimination
At least some of the plain wording in some of the relevant instruments appears to potentially prohibit discrimination on the basis of province of origin. E.g. those that prohibit discrimination on the basis of "place of origin," as opposed to more specifically "national origin."
The BC Human Rights Tribunal explain though that "Place of origin includes the fact of being born in a particular country or group of countries or region of Canada or the world."
I have found no reported judgment or decision of a human rights tribunal that has recognized discrimination on the basis of province of origin.
Why not
Province of origin has likely not been understood to be within the umbrella of "place of origin" because the grounds of prohibited discrimination are based on a history of disadvantage and historic patterns of discrimination. The Supreme Court of Canada has recognized that the purpose of protecting against certain grounds of discrimination is to "remedy or prevent discrimination against groups subject to stereotyping, historical disadvantage and political and social prejudice in Canadian society" (R. v. Swain, [1991] 1 S.C.R. 933). They "identify a basis for stereotypical decision-making or a group that has historically suffered discrimination."
In rejecting place of residence as a potential ground, the Supreme Court of Canada said:
Nothing suggests that Winkler [a city in Manitoba] residents are historically disadvantaged or that they suffer from any sort of prejudice.
A similar analysis may very well apply to an attempt to claim province of origin as a ground of prohibited discrimination. But it is of course open for someone to argue with evidence in an appropriate case.