This paper offers a brief overview of Canadian case law since the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms was enacted in 1982. At the same time that it has more firmly entrenched religious freedom, the Charter has placed explicit limits on the right of religious freedom. Canadian courts have shown themselves willing to intervene in the internal workings of religious institutions. Legal protection has been extended to include not only non-Christian religions but also non-religious beliefs more generally. The cumulative effect of these decisions has been to effectively erode the de facto separation between Church and State that has developed in Canada. The value of increased respect for religious pluralism is potentially offset by increasing ...
Since Dagenais c. Radio-Canada, rendered in 1994, the Supreme Court of Canada has never questioned t...
Constitutional litigation has become a central arena for debate about human rights. Groups from all ...
Does freedom of religion protect religious institutions or does it only protect the individual relig...
This paper offers a brief overview of Canadian case law since the Canadian Charter of Rights and Fre...
This paper takes as its starting point a the oretical gap in the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court ...
This thesis examines the conditions under which a defense of religious freedom can be successfully a...
This article examines three axes around which contemporary Canadian debates on freedom of religion a...
This Article examines whether the global trend of codifying rights in entrenched bills accompanied b...
Religious rights are based on political liberalism which has recently evolved into pluralist constit...
Is religion a threat to constitutionalism? Does it steer the secular legal system toward compromises...
This thesis argues that the current Canadian approach to freedom of religion is inconsistent with Ca...
If there is no hierarchy of rights in Canada, then why does freedom of religion so often seem to los...
Introduction In both South Africa and Canada religions per se have not been principal trouble spots ...
We are still in the early stages of working out what it means for the Canadian state to be both offi...
A disproportionate number of the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent cases on freedom of religion come ...
Since Dagenais c. Radio-Canada, rendered in 1994, the Supreme Court of Canada has never questioned t...
Constitutional litigation has become a central arena for debate about human rights. Groups from all ...
Does freedom of religion protect religious institutions or does it only protect the individual relig...
This paper offers a brief overview of Canadian case law since the Canadian Charter of Rights and Fre...
This paper takes as its starting point a the oretical gap in the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court ...
This thesis examines the conditions under which a defense of religious freedom can be successfully a...
This article examines three axes around which contemporary Canadian debates on freedom of religion a...
This Article examines whether the global trend of codifying rights in entrenched bills accompanied b...
Religious rights are based on political liberalism which has recently evolved into pluralist constit...
Is religion a threat to constitutionalism? Does it steer the secular legal system toward compromises...
This thesis argues that the current Canadian approach to freedom of religion is inconsistent with Ca...
If there is no hierarchy of rights in Canada, then why does freedom of religion so often seem to los...
Introduction In both South Africa and Canada religions per se have not been principal trouble spots ...
We are still in the early stages of working out what it means for the Canadian state to be both offi...
A disproportionate number of the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent cases on freedom of religion come ...
Since Dagenais c. Radio-Canada, rendered in 1994, the Supreme Court of Canada has never questioned t...
Constitutional litigation has become a central arena for debate about human rights. Groups from all ...
Does freedom of religion protect religious institutions or does it only protect the individual relig...