The case of Tanudjaja v Attorney General (Canada) takes up the cause of housing rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in a novel and complex way. The government actions and inactions cited as constitutional breaches and the broad remedial requests reflect the “pixelated” picture of housing concerns necessary to understanding Canada’s housing security crisis. In dismissing the challenge at a preliminary stage, the Ontario Superior and Appeal Courts risk rendering the Charter irrelevant to the deep social justice concerns that cross our country. More specifically, formulaic judicial invocation of concerns about positive rights and justiciability leave the most vulnerable among us constitutionally outside in the cold, partic...
This article examines the rights of social housing tenants under Australian human rights charters. V...
Constitutional law cases that revolve around the rights or circumstances of those groups most margin...
The right to housing is recognized by international human rights treaties as an integral part of the...
The case of Tanudjaja v Attorney General (Canada) takes up the cause of housing rights under the Can...
This paper examines Tanudjaja v Attorney General—the “Right to Housing” case. The authors, co-counse...
In this article we consider the scope of social and economic rights litigation under the Charter of ...
The case of Tanudjaja v. Attorney General, represents an unprecedented opportunity for Canadian lega...
This paper describes the history of the Right to Housing (R2H) Coalition of Ontario and the role of ...
Explores the different levels of protection against arbitrary eviction for Ontario residents of subs...
Collects papers presented at the Right to Housing symposium, “A Road to Home: The Right to Housing i...
Canadian courts have routinely excluded basic social and economic rights from protection under the C...
Concentrating on Canadian experience, specifically litigation under the Canadian Charter of Rights a...
Over the decade since the birth of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, expectations that it...
What would the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms have looked like if it had been designed for ...
The first decades of the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s Charter jurisprudence have coincided roughly w...
This article examines the rights of social housing tenants under Australian human rights charters. V...
Constitutional law cases that revolve around the rights or circumstances of those groups most margin...
The right to housing is recognized by international human rights treaties as an integral part of the...
The case of Tanudjaja v Attorney General (Canada) takes up the cause of housing rights under the Can...
This paper examines Tanudjaja v Attorney General—the “Right to Housing” case. The authors, co-counse...
In this article we consider the scope of social and economic rights litigation under the Charter of ...
The case of Tanudjaja v. Attorney General, represents an unprecedented opportunity for Canadian lega...
This paper describes the history of the Right to Housing (R2H) Coalition of Ontario and the role of ...
Explores the different levels of protection against arbitrary eviction for Ontario residents of subs...
Collects papers presented at the Right to Housing symposium, “A Road to Home: The Right to Housing i...
Canadian courts have routinely excluded basic social and economic rights from protection under the C...
Concentrating on Canadian experience, specifically litigation under the Canadian Charter of Rights a...
Over the decade since the birth of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, expectations that it...
What would the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms have looked like if it had been designed for ...
The first decades of the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s Charter jurisprudence have coincided roughly w...
This article examines the rights of social housing tenants under Australian human rights charters. V...
Constitutional law cases that revolve around the rights or circumstances of those groups most margin...
The right to housing is recognized by international human rights treaties as an integral part of the...