A new book on the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms by two professors from the University of Calgary, F.L. Morton and Rainer Knopff, is entitled The Charter Revolution and the Court Party.1 By the “Charter revolution” the authors refer to the active law- making role assumed by the Supreme Court of Canada since the adoption of the Charter of Rights in 1982.2 By the “Court Party” they refer to a cluster of interest groups promoting Charter rights through litigation.3 The thesis of the book is that these groups have been successful in obtaining changes in the law from the Supreme Court of Canada that could not have been achieved in the representative legislative assemblies. That, they argue, is wrong because it is “undemocratic.” I agree...
This article challenges the thesis of Peter W. Hogg, Allison A. Bushell Thornton, and Wade K. Wright...
The Supreme Court of Canada has vacillated in its guidance about the incorporation of the Charter i...
In 1990, Supreme Court Justice Bertha Wilson proclaimed that the Canadian Charter of Rights \u27is a...
A new book on the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms by two professors from the University of C...
This article responds to the argument that judicial review of legislation under the Canadian Charter...
The proponents of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms are fighting a mighty battle to show that, desp...
Competing theories regarding the development of a “rights revolution” in Canada have appeared in the...
“Charter values” is a term used with increasing frequency in the decisions of the Supreme Court of C...
The author argues that the Court Challenges Program’s 2006 cancellation was based on claims that jud...
CANADA’S CONSTITUTIONALIZED BILL OF RIGHTS, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,2 unified the country...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms has generated not only new terrain over which discursive...
Competing theories regarding the development of a rights revolution in Canada have appeared in the...
Prospective readers would be forgiven were they to react in a dismissive manner to yet another book ...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms has generated not only new terrain over which discursive...
The Supreme Court of Canada\u27s initial interpretations of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freed...
This article challenges the thesis of Peter W. Hogg, Allison A. Bushell Thornton, and Wade K. Wright...
The Supreme Court of Canada has vacillated in its guidance about the incorporation of the Charter i...
In 1990, Supreme Court Justice Bertha Wilson proclaimed that the Canadian Charter of Rights \u27is a...
A new book on the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms by two professors from the University of C...
This article responds to the argument that judicial review of legislation under the Canadian Charter...
The proponents of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms are fighting a mighty battle to show that, desp...
Competing theories regarding the development of a “rights revolution” in Canada have appeared in the...
“Charter values” is a term used with increasing frequency in the decisions of the Supreme Court of C...
The author argues that the Court Challenges Program’s 2006 cancellation was based on claims that jud...
CANADA’S CONSTITUTIONALIZED BILL OF RIGHTS, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,2 unified the country...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms has generated not only new terrain over which discursive...
Competing theories regarding the development of a rights revolution in Canada have appeared in the...
Prospective readers would be forgiven were they to react in a dismissive manner to yet another book ...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms has generated not only new terrain over which discursive...
The Supreme Court of Canada\u27s initial interpretations of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freed...
This article challenges the thesis of Peter W. Hogg, Allison A. Bushell Thornton, and Wade K. Wright...
The Supreme Court of Canada has vacillated in its guidance about the incorporation of the Charter i...
In 1990, Supreme Court Justice Bertha Wilson proclaimed that the Canadian Charter of Rights \u27is a...