Contrary to recent criticisms to the effect that the Supreme Court of Canada favours the rights of criminal defendants and shuns the interests of the community, the Lamer Court has in fact championed the moral requisites of the community in its constitutional jurisprudence on criminal fault. By viewing rights and responsibilities as inextricably linked, the Lamer Court implicitly borrows from natural law traditions espoused by the Dickson Court\u27s most conspicuous dissenter on criminal fault issues-Mr. Justice William McIntyre. This article argues that the tradition or philosophy underlying criminal fault as per the Lamer Court contrasts with the individualist, rights-oriented tendency of the Dickson Court, and corresponds with the approa...
Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that the right to liberty enshrined in section 7 of the Charter in...
The distinction between criminal and administrative wrongdoing plays a key role in Canadian public l...
This paper examines the Supreme Court of Canada’s use of the concept of “harm” in its decisions in R...
Contrary to recent criticisms to the effect that the Supreme Court of Canada favours the rights of c...
The late Antonio Lamer took the lead, under the Charter, in constitutionalizing the substantive crim...
The Supreme Court of Canada has faced a perennial problem, particularly since the advent of the Cana...
In Lucier v. The Queen, the Supreme Court of Canada unanimously held that a declaration against pena...
Two constitutional principles--constitutional supremacy and parliamentary supremacy--should not be t...
In this perspective piece, the author attacks the notion of moral involuntariness in the Supreme C...
The “marijuana cases” (R. v. Malmo-Levine; R. v. Caine) and the “spanking case” (Canadian Foundation...
The nearly three decades in which Beverley McLachlin was a member of the Supreme Court, including 18...
Assessments of “reasonableness” are central to adjudicating claims under several Charter rights and ...
Book review of Charter Justice in Canadian Criminal Law by Don Stuart and published by Carswell (Sca...
Chief Justice Dickson has suggested that Canadian jurists should consult American authority in Chart...
It is not every year that the Supreme Court of Canada reverses itself. However, as will be seen, thi...
Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that the right to liberty enshrined in section 7 of the Charter in...
The distinction between criminal and administrative wrongdoing plays a key role in Canadian public l...
This paper examines the Supreme Court of Canada’s use of the concept of “harm” in its decisions in R...
Contrary to recent criticisms to the effect that the Supreme Court of Canada favours the rights of c...
The late Antonio Lamer took the lead, under the Charter, in constitutionalizing the substantive crim...
The Supreme Court of Canada has faced a perennial problem, particularly since the advent of the Cana...
In Lucier v. The Queen, the Supreme Court of Canada unanimously held that a declaration against pena...
Two constitutional principles--constitutional supremacy and parliamentary supremacy--should not be t...
In this perspective piece, the author attacks the notion of moral involuntariness in the Supreme C...
The “marijuana cases” (R. v. Malmo-Levine; R. v. Caine) and the “spanking case” (Canadian Foundation...
The nearly three decades in which Beverley McLachlin was a member of the Supreme Court, including 18...
Assessments of “reasonableness” are central to adjudicating claims under several Charter rights and ...
Book review of Charter Justice in Canadian Criminal Law by Don Stuart and published by Carswell (Sca...
Chief Justice Dickson has suggested that Canadian jurists should consult American authority in Chart...
It is not every year that the Supreme Court of Canada reverses itself. However, as will be seen, thi...
Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that the right to liberty enshrined in section 7 of the Charter in...
The distinction between criminal and administrative wrongdoing plays a key role in Canadian public l...
This paper examines the Supreme Court of Canada’s use of the concept of “harm” in its decisions in R...