Students' and parents' freedom of conscience and religion and their right not to be discriminated against because of one's religious beliefs, enshrined in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, have been the subject of litigation in a number of provinces but not in Quebec. This article, after providing an overview of the major provisions of the Quebec Education Act governing the issue of moral and religious instruction in the province's public schools, seeks, first, to explain why these provisions have not been, and are unlikely to be, a focal point for litigation in the province similar to that which has been launched in other provinces; and, then to signal three other potentially contentious matters inherent in the foregoing provisi...
From the point of view of those who find in it no threat to their own educational inclinations, the ...
This article explores the question of whether it is morally permissible for the liberal state to req...
Ongoing litigation in Canada suggests that the legal status of religiously affiliated law schools co...
This article is primarily concerned with an analysis of the constitutional protection provided under...
In Loyola High School, et al. v. Attorney General of Quebec, the Supreme Court of Canada held that t...
This paper examines what role, if any, religion should have in Canada’s public schools. The basic ar...
Abstract: Using the recent debate over lesbian and gay marriage as a starting point, this article ex...
The Charter of Rights and Freedoms protects the rights of all Canadians. Historically, Canadian legi...
The constitutional and statutory frameworks within which education operates in Canada are significan...
This paper describes the process of «laïcisation » in Quebec’s school system. This process has repre...
Abstract Ontario public schools have become a focal point—and contested sites—where the dichotomy of...
In 2008 Quebec introduced a new ethics and religious culture course. This marks a significant develo...
If there is no hierarchy of rights in Canada, then why does freedom of religion so often seem to los...
Ontario is the only Province that publicly funds Roman Catholic separate schools, while providing no...
This article examines three axes around which contemporary Canadian debates on freedom of religion a...
From the point of view of those who find in it no threat to their own educational inclinations, the ...
This article explores the question of whether it is morally permissible for the liberal state to req...
Ongoing litigation in Canada suggests that the legal status of religiously affiliated law schools co...
This article is primarily concerned with an analysis of the constitutional protection provided under...
In Loyola High School, et al. v. Attorney General of Quebec, the Supreme Court of Canada held that t...
This paper examines what role, if any, religion should have in Canada’s public schools. The basic ar...
Abstract: Using the recent debate over lesbian and gay marriage as a starting point, this article ex...
The Charter of Rights and Freedoms protects the rights of all Canadians. Historically, Canadian legi...
The constitutional and statutory frameworks within which education operates in Canada are significan...
This paper describes the process of «laïcisation » in Quebec’s school system. This process has repre...
Abstract Ontario public schools have become a focal point—and contested sites—where the dichotomy of...
In 2008 Quebec introduced a new ethics and religious culture course. This marks a significant develo...
If there is no hierarchy of rights in Canada, then why does freedom of religion so often seem to los...
Ontario is the only Province that publicly funds Roman Catholic separate schools, while providing no...
This article examines three axes around which contemporary Canadian debates on freedom of religion a...
From the point of view of those who find in it no threat to their own educational inclinations, the ...
This article explores the question of whether it is morally permissible for the liberal state to req...
Ongoing litigation in Canada suggests that the legal status of religiously affiliated law schools co...