This article critically analyses the decision of the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Suresh Case, especially with regard to its underlying basis in doctoring and policy, and its implications for the non-refoulement norm. The principal conclusions of this article are as follows. In the first place, laudable as it mostly is, the Suresh decision is based on a number of apparently credible, although flawed, images of certain important policy and doctrinal assumptions and constructs. The decision relies on a conception of the desiderata for Canadian national security that is flawed on two scores - because its conception of security interdependence is so overly formalist as to be hardly reassuring to those in fear of terrorism and ...
Canada is preparing to implement a controversial provision of the Immigration Act that will deny asy...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines exclusionary Canadian immigration law, ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis is entitled “Limits on the State's Right to Exclu...
This article critically analyses the decision of the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the ...
This article critically analyses the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Suresh case, esp...
This paper examines the role of unimplemented international treaty norms in the Canadian domestic le...
In Suresh v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration and Ahani v. MCI, the Supreme Court of Canada d...
In Suresh v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration and Ahani v. MCI, the Supreme Court of Canada d...
This thesis examines whether the balancing of security interests against refoulement to torture, as ...
This article uses constitutional discourses on the legality of security certificates to shed light o...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s standard of review jurisprudence has been marked by the ascendancy of ...
“International law generally rejects deportation to torture, even where national security interests ...
This article uses constitutional discourses on the legality of security certificates to shed light o...
Traditional analyses of Canada’s behaviour on international human rights tend to view it through the...
This thesis examines the jurisprudence of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Ref...
Canada is preparing to implement a controversial provision of the Immigration Act that will deny asy...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines exclusionary Canadian immigration law, ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis is entitled “Limits on the State's Right to Exclu...
This article critically analyses the decision of the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the ...
This article critically analyses the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Suresh case, esp...
This paper examines the role of unimplemented international treaty norms in the Canadian domestic le...
In Suresh v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration and Ahani v. MCI, the Supreme Court of Canada d...
In Suresh v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration and Ahani v. MCI, the Supreme Court of Canada d...
This thesis examines whether the balancing of security interests against refoulement to torture, as ...
This article uses constitutional discourses on the legality of security certificates to shed light o...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s standard of review jurisprudence has been marked by the ascendancy of ...
“International law generally rejects deportation to torture, even where national security interests ...
This article uses constitutional discourses on the legality of security certificates to shed light o...
Traditional analyses of Canada’s behaviour on international human rights tend to view it through the...
This thesis examines the jurisprudence of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Ref...
Canada is preparing to implement a controversial provision of the Immigration Act that will deny asy...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines exclusionary Canadian immigration law, ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis is entitled “Limits on the State's Right to Exclu...