This paper argues that in deciding whether state action is arbitrary, overbroad or disproportionate, contrary to section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, courts should look beyond the relationship between the means and ends of state action and toward broader considerations about the democratic context in which such action occurs. The case of Canada (Attorney General) v. PHS Community Services Society is taken as the paper’s starting point. The re, the Supreme Court of Canada overturned the federal Minister of Health’s decision to deny Insite — a provincially supported safe injection site — an exemption from drug laws. The Court, in finding the denial arbitrary and overbroad, relied heavily on the factual record of Insite’s ...
The author argues that, under section 1 of the Charter, the courts must weigh carefully the democrat...
Assessments of “reasonableness” are central to adjudicating claims under several Charter rights and ...
At the heart of procedural law lie questions concerning the role of courts in a liberal democratic s...
This paper argues that in deciding whether state action is arbitrary, overbroad or disproportionate,...
Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that the right to liberty enshrined in section 7 of the Charter in...
In Canada (Attorney General) v. Bedford, the Supreme Court struck down Canada’s prostitution laws on...
This paper examines the rise to prominence of proportionality analysis in section 7 of the Canadian ...
Constitutional law cases that revolve around the rights or circumstances of those groups most margin...
The Supreme Court of Canada has faced a perennial problem, particularly since the advent of the Cana...
The issue addressed in this paper is whether we have effective remedies for breach of Charter protec...
Implicit in the federal principle is the need to give equal respect to provincial and federal claims...
Part I of this paper documents the unscrupulous politics of the majority Harper Government in enacti...
Section 7 of the Charter of Rights was not intended by the framers to be a provision that authorized...
The “marijuana cases” (R. v. Malmo-Levine; R. v. Caine) and the “spanking case” (Canadian Foundation...
While we are forced, somewhat begrudgingly, to face the fact that there are limitations to what medi...
The author argues that, under section 1 of the Charter, the courts must weigh carefully the democrat...
Assessments of “reasonableness” are central to adjudicating claims under several Charter rights and ...
At the heart of procedural law lie questions concerning the role of courts in a liberal democratic s...
This paper argues that in deciding whether state action is arbitrary, overbroad or disproportionate,...
Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that the right to liberty enshrined in section 7 of the Charter in...
In Canada (Attorney General) v. Bedford, the Supreme Court struck down Canada’s prostitution laws on...
This paper examines the rise to prominence of proportionality analysis in section 7 of the Canadian ...
Constitutional law cases that revolve around the rights or circumstances of those groups most margin...
The Supreme Court of Canada has faced a perennial problem, particularly since the advent of the Cana...
The issue addressed in this paper is whether we have effective remedies for breach of Charter protec...
Implicit in the federal principle is the need to give equal respect to provincial and federal claims...
Part I of this paper documents the unscrupulous politics of the majority Harper Government in enacti...
Section 7 of the Charter of Rights was not intended by the framers to be a provision that authorized...
The “marijuana cases” (R. v. Malmo-Levine; R. v. Caine) and the “spanking case” (Canadian Foundation...
While we are forced, somewhat begrudgingly, to face the fact that there are limitations to what medi...
The author argues that, under section 1 of the Charter, the courts must weigh carefully the democrat...
Assessments of “reasonableness” are central to adjudicating claims under several Charter rights and ...
At the heart of procedural law lie questions concerning the role of courts in a liberal democratic s...