Section 9 of the Charter guarantees freedom from arbitrary detention, section 10 provides certain rights on arrest, and section 11 guarantees various rights to those charged with an offence. In this chapter the authors consider the aspects of these rights which have been authoritatively determined, as well as pointing to the areas which remain unsettled and discussing the areas of lingering controversy
This paper describes how the Federal Courts have dealt with two issues pertaining to the extra-terri...
The security certificate process set out in Canada\u27s Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA...
This article is devoted to the question of whether the extradition from Canada of a fugitive Canadia...
Section 9 of the Charter guarantees freedom from arbitrary detention, section 10 provides certain ri...
It is a remarkable fact that more than 25 years after the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ca...
This paper examines why section 9 of the Charter, the right not to be arbitrarily detained or impris...
The implications set out in Section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms are examined th...
This article challenges the conventional legal wisdom that no right or freedom in the Canadian Chart...
This paper points to the surprising fact that 25 years of Charter decisions have not produced a sect...
The somewhat rudimentary notions of liberty, life and security of the person that are corralled by t...
In R. v. Grant and R. v. Suberu, the Supreme Court of Canada revisited the relationship between pol...
This article addresses the problem of determining when detention exists in the interrogation process...
This paper examines over twenty years of prisoner litigation under the Canadian Charter of Rights an...
In July 2009 the Supreme Court of Canada released R. v. Grant, R. v. Suberu, R. v. Harrison and R. v...
In response to expressed concern about the impact that the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms w...
This paper describes how the Federal Courts have dealt with two issues pertaining to the extra-terri...
The security certificate process set out in Canada\u27s Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA...
This article is devoted to the question of whether the extradition from Canada of a fugitive Canadia...
Section 9 of the Charter guarantees freedom from arbitrary detention, section 10 provides certain ri...
It is a remarkable fact that more than 25 years after the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ca...
This paper examines why section 9 of the Charter, the right not to be arbitrarily detained or impris...
The implications set out in Section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms are examined th...
This article challenges the conventional legal wisdom that no right or freedom in the Canadian Chart...
This paper points to the surprising fact that 25 years of Charter decisions have not produced a sect...
The somewhat rudimentary notions of liberty, life and security of the person that are corralled by t...
In R. v. Grant and R. v. Suberu, the Supreme Court of Canada revisited the relationship between pol...
This article addresses the problem of determining when detention exists in the interrogation process...
This paper examines over twenty years of prisoner litigation under the Canadian Charter of Rights an...
In July 2009 the Supreme Court of Canada released R. v. Grant, R. v. Suberu, R. v. Harrison and R. v...
In response to expressed concern about the impact that the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms w...
This paper describes how the Federal Courts have dealt with two issues pertaining to the extra-terri...
The security certificate process set out in Canada\u27s Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA...
This article is devoted to the question of whether the extradition from Canada of a fugitive Canadia...