This article challenges the conventional legal wisdom that no right or freedom in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is absolute. Section 1 of the Charter is the most commonly cited source of this wisdom, but this provision merely sets out the standard that the state must meet to justify a limit on a Charter right or freedom. Section 1 does not provide advance confirmation that limits satisfying this standard exist for all Charter rights and freedoms. This interpretation, if correct, does not automatically render any of the rights or freedoms in the Charter absolute. Indeed, the standard in section 1 may ultimately capture all of these rights and freedoms. Nonetheless, this article proposes two candidates for absolute status: (a) f...
This article analyses the distinction between rights and principles in the EU Charter of Fundamenta...
The Supreme Court of Canada has vacillated in its guidance about the incorporation of the Charter i...
At first glance, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms seems rather out of place in the new er...
This article challenges the conventional legal wisdom that no right or freedom in the Canadian Chart...
Section 9 of the Charter guarantees freedom from arbitrary detention, section 10 provides certain ri...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is Part 1 of the Constitution Act, 1982, which is part o...
Although constitutional protection for rights is increasingly popular, there is little systematic re...
Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that the right to liberty enshrined in section 7 of the Charter in...
Whether the Supreme Court of Canada can and should recognize so-called “positive” rights (viz., righ...
Whether the Supreme Court of Canada can and should recognize so-called “positive” rights (viz., righ...
Section 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms which is part of the [Canadian] Constitutio...
The author argues that the apparent collapse or erosion of the Oakes test reflects the problem of fi...
The addition of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms represented a fundamental shift in Canadian gove...
Since the early days of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Supreme Court of Canada ha...
The author argues that corporations do not have any rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and ...
This article analyses the distinction between rights and principles in the EU Charter of Fundamenta...
The Supreme Court of Canada has vacillated in its guidance about the incorporation of the Charter i...
At first glance, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms seems rather out of place in the new er...
This article challenges the conventional legal wisdom that no right or freedom in the Canadian Chart...
Section 9 of the Charter guarantees freedom from arbitrary detention, section 10 provides certain ri...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is Part 1 of the Constitution Act, 1982, which is part o...
Although constitutional protection for rights is increasingly popular, there is little systematic re...
Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that the right to liberty enshrined in section 7 of the Charter in...
Whether the Supreme Court of Canada can and should recognize so-called “positive” rights (viz., righ...
Whether the Supreme Court of Canada can and should recognize so-called “positive” rights (viz., righ...
Section 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms which is part of the [Canadian] Constitutio...
The author argues that the apparent collapse or erosion of the Oakes test reflects the problem of fi...
The addition of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms represented a fundamental shift in Canadian gove...
Since the early days of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Supreme Court of Canada ha...
The author argues that corporations do not have any rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and ...
This article analyses the distinction between rights and principles in the EU Charter of Fundamenta...
The Supreme Court of Canada has vacillated in its guidance about the incorporation of the Charter i...
At first glance, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms seems rather out of place in the new er...