When the Parliament of Canada enacted the Canadian Bill of Rights\u27 in 1960 it injected fresh authority into the judicial power of interpretation of federal laws. The process of interpretation of the Bill ofRights itself has been difficult for a judiciary trained to accept law as given and to take for granted the great creative periods and personalities of English law without regard to the fact that much if not most of the civil liberties tradition in English (and therefore Canadian) law was triggered by declaratory statutes like Magna Carta and the English Bill ofRights. The decade and a half of existence of the Canadian Bill of Rights has seen the important questions of interpretation go before the Supreme Court of Canada. A survey of w...
This article is an updated and slightly revised version of the national report submitted by the auth...
The essay starts off by analysing the stratified and mixed nature of the Canadian system of legal so...
This article reveals how audiences, especially in anglophone Canada, initially received and interpre...
When the Parliament of Canada enacted the Canadian Bill of Rights\u27 in 1960 it injected fresh auth...
Since the adoption of the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Charter), the Supreme Court of Canada...
This paper examines the surprising resurgence of the Bill of Rights in procedural fairness cases bef...
Competing theories regarding the development of a “rights revolution” in Canada have appeared in the...
The 1980s witnessed a judicial “rights revolution” in Canada characterized by the Supreme Court of C...
This lecture scans the development of human rights law in Canada from a period of judicially implied...
Although constitutional protection for rights is increasingly popular, there is little systematic re...
Competing theories regarding the development of a rights revolution in Canada have appeared in the...
This article examines the development and current status of positive social and economic rights in C...
The twentieth anniversary of the enactment of the Canadian Bill of Rights is being celebrated at a t...
Canada has contributed an important idea to constitutional thought about how to conceive of legislat...
A limited form of judicial review has always been a prominent feature of Canadian federalism. Immedi...
This article is an updated and slightly revised version of the national report submitted by the auth...
The essay starts off by analysing the stratified and mixed nature of the Canadian system of legal so...
This article reveals how audiences, especially in anglophone Canada, initially received and interpre...
When the Parliament of Canada enacted the Canadian Bill of Rights\u27 in 1960 it injected fresh auth...
Since the adoption of the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Charter), the Supreme Court of Canada...
This paper examines the surprising resurgence of the Bill of Rights in procedural fairness cases bef...
Competing theories regarding the development of a “rights revolution” in Canada have appeared in the...
The 1980s witnessed a judicial “rights revolution” in Canada characterized by the Supreme Court of C...
This lecture scans the development of human rights law in Canada from a period of judicially implied...
Although constitutional protection for rights is increasingly popular, there is little systematic re...
Competing theories regarding the development of a rights revolution in Canada have appeared in the...
This article examines the development and current status of positive social and economic rights in C...
The twentieth anniversary of the enactment of the Canadian Bill of Rights is being celebrated at a t...
Canada has contributed an important idea to constitutional thought about how to conceive of legislat...
A limited form of judicial review has always been a prominent feature of Canadian federalism. Immedi...
This article is an updated and slightly revised version of the national report submitted by the auth...
The essay starts off by analysing the stratified and mixed nature of the Canadian system of legal so...
This article reveals how audiences, especially in anglophone Canada, initially received and interpre...