This case comment focuses on two issues of methodology: the first concerns constitutional interpretation and the democratic process, or the dialogue issue, and the second, the relationship between Charter guarantees, or the hierarchy issue. To set the stage, an initial section provides an overview of the Stinchcombe/O\u27Connor/Mills trilogy, and is followed by a more detailed analysis of Mills that examines the tension between judicial and legislative decision making, before considering how Parliament and the Court altered O\u27Connor\u27s model for balancing the rights of the accused and complainants. On the latter issue, though the article does not comment in detail on the mechanics of defence access to these records, some attention to p...
This paper suggests that several recent decisions of the Supreme Court show undue vagueness, inconsi...
The Supreme Court of Canada released seven Charter decisions in 2012 that were not unanimous. When c...
Book review of Reasoning with the Charter by Leon E. Trakman and published by Butterworths (Toronto)...
This case comment focuses on two issues of methodology: the first concerns constitutional interpreta...
By suggesting that we view the judicial-legislative relationship as a dialogue, the authors of Char...
Dialogue theory regards judicial interpretation of the Charter as authoritative, and, as a result, d...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
The first part of this commentary examines the roles of coordinate construction in which legislature...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
This paper examines two cases that raise questions about the capacity to secure redress for the limi...
In its recent decision affirming the courts’ power to issue “declarations of inconsistency” between ...
This article challenges the thesis of Peter W. Hogg, Allison A. Bushell Thornton, and Wade K. Wright...
The text of the Charter separates the rights conferred from reasonable limits which may justifiably ...
Controversies about constitutional “dialogue” often stem from disagreement over the concept itself. ...
Constitutional dialogue has become an influential concept to understand the relationship between cou...
This paper suggests that several recent decisions of the Supreme Court show undue vagueness, inconsi...
The Supreme Court of Canada released seven Charter decisions in 2012 that were not unanimous. When c...
Book review of Reasoning with the Charter by Leon E. Trakman and published by Butterworths (Toronto)...
This case comment focuses on two issues of methodology: the first concerns constitutional interpreta...
By suggesting that we view the judicial-legislative relationship as a dialogue, the authors of Char...
Dialogue theory regards judicial interpretation of the Charter as authoritative, and, as a result, d...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
The first part of this commentary examines the roles of coordinate construction in which legislature...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
This paper examines two cases that raise questions about the capacity to secure redress for the limi...
In its recent decision affirming the courts’ power to issue “declarations of inconsistency” between ...
This article challenges the thesis of Peter W. Hogg, Allison A. Bushell Thornton, and Wade K. Wright...
The text of the Charter separates the rights conferred from reasonable limits which may justifiably ...
Controversies about constitutional “dialogue” often stem from disagreement over the concept itself. ...
Constitutional dialogue has become an influential concept to understand the relationship between cou...
This paper suggests that several recent decisions of the Supreme Court show undue vagueness, inconsi...
The Supreme Court of Canada released seven Charter decisions in 2012 that were not unanimous. When c...
Book review of Reasoning with the Charter by Leon E. Trakman and published by Butterworths (Toronto)...