This article intends to address the limits associated with a rigid grounds-based approach to equality, requiring claimants to categorize their identity within an enumerated ground to “deserve” the protection of the equality guarantee. To this end, I first shed light on the irreconcilability of rigid grounds with post-structuralist accounts of identity, and then lay claim to an approach to equality that extends its reach to fluid, intersectional groups. Thereafter, taking Canada as a case study, I parse out the Canadian equality jurisprudence, particularly the cases offering an analysis of the aforementioned grounds. I then move to sketch out two proposals to overcome the risks associated with the current equality jurisprudence, by focusing ...
Although both the Canadian Charter and the United States Constitutions protect persons from denial o...
In the 1990s, identity has become the centrepiece of theoretical work in a variety of disciplines....
After a discussion of the impact of the principle of equality, entrenched in the Charters approved i...
This article intends to address the limits associated with a rigid grounds-based approach to equalit...
In this thesis I start by reviewing the theoretical perspectives that have informed the debate arou...
In Canada, particularly since the protection of minority rights under the Charter, rights rhetoric a...
On April 17, 1982, Canada repatriated its constitution from the Parliament at Westminster, sweeping ...
Heterosexual married couples are supported by a wide array of legal privileges, benefits, rights and...
The paper examines the ways the tests for discrimination expounded in the statutory and constitution...
This thesis considers the implications of relational theory for doctrinal debates in Canadian and Am...
Equality is a protean concept. Even if one has taken a position on the equality of opportunity versu...
This article questions the terms on which groups that have traditionally been treated as other in ...
The major objective of this article is to contribute to an understanding of the potential impact of ...
Why was Canada the first country to celebrate legal marriage between two persons of the same sex? In...
This paper explores the theory of intersectionality and its viability for the analysis of human righ...
Although both the Canadian Charter and the United States Constitutions protect persons from denial o...
In the 1990s, identity has become the centrepiece of theoretical work in a variety of disciplines....
After a discussion of the impact of the principle of equality, entrenched in the Charters approved i...
This article intends to address the limits associated with a rigid grounds-based approach to equalit...
In this thesis I start by reviewing the theoretical perspectives that have informed the debate arou...
In Canada, particularly since the protection of minority rights under the Charter, rights rhetoric a...
On April 17, 1982, Canada repatriated its constitution from the Parliament at Westminster, sweeping ...
Heterosexual married couples are supported by a wide array of legal privileges, benefits, rights and...
The paper examines the ways the tests for discrimination expounded in the statutory and constitution...
This thesis considers the implications of relational theory for doctrinal debates in Canadian and Am...
Equality is a protean concept. Even if one has taken a position on the equality of opportunity versu...
This article questions the terms on which groups that have traditionally been treated as other in ...
The major objective of this article is to contribute to an understanding of the potential impact of ...
Why was Canada the first country to celebrate legal marriage between two persons of the same sex? In...
This paper explores the theory of intersectionality and its viability for the analysis of human righ...
Although both the Canadian Charter and the United States Constitutions protect persons from denial o...
In the 1990s, identity has become the centrepiece of theoretical work in a variety of disciplines....
After a discussion of the impact of the principle of equality, entrenched in the Charters approved i...