This article uses the Supreme Court of Canada’s Reference re Senate Reform as a basis for arguing that metaphors are not always appropriate in constitutional adjudication. In that decision, the Court relies on the metaphor of “constitutional architecture” ten times (11 if a subheading is counted). Despite the multiple references, the Court leaves unanswered questions about what the architecture metaphor is doing. Does it help to clarify? Is it the same or different from the text itself? Is it the same or different from “structure”? Is not the metaphor itself capable of multiple meanings? Relying too heavily on metaphors allows figurative usage to do the heavy lifting of rigour and persuasion and may cause more problems than it seeks to reso...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
The chapter discusses the impact of judicial frame on the Courts legal reasoning, by pointing out th...
Dominant narratives about the institutional life of the Supreme Court of Canada pay too little atten...
This article uses the Supreme Court of Canada’s Reference re Senate Reform as a basis for arguing th...
Although the metaphor of "constitutional architecture" appeared in some of the Supreme Court of Cana...
I have often wondered whether the history of Canadian constitutional law might best be taught by tra...
This article sheds light on the fundamental role that narratives and metaphors play in shaping how w...
A large number of legal concepts is expressed through metaphors, exemplifing the Conceptual Metaphor...
In Charter Dialogue Revisited-Or \u27Much Ado About Metaphors, \u27 it is noted that the original i...
This paper explores what we did and did not learn from the Senate Reform Reference about the role of...
In the modern jurisprudence of the United States Supreme Court, the controversy over the place of me...
The Senate Reference is ultimately a decision about how democratic decision-making ought to be condu...
From the standpoint of traditional legal thought, metaphor is at best a dash of poetry adorning lawy...
Part I below explores the interpretive approaches of three other high national courts that have enga...
A metaphor has always dominated the Supreme Court\u27s religion clause jurisprudence. The metaphor p...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
The chapter discusses the impact of judicial frame on the Courts legal reasoning, by pointing out th...
Dominant narratives about the institutional life of the Supreme Court of Canada pay too little atten...
This article uses the Supreme Court of Canada’s Reference re Senate Reform as a basis for arguing th...
Although the metaphor of "constitutional architecture" appeared in some of the Supreme Court of Cana...
I have often wondered whether the history of Canadian constitutional law might best be taught by tra...
This article sheds light on the fundamental role that narratives and metaphors play in shaping how w...
A large number of legal concepts is expressed through metaphors, exemplifing the Conceptual Metaphor...
In Charter Dialogue Revisited-Or \u27Much Ado About Metaphors, \u27 it is noted that the original i...
This paper explores what we did and did not learn from the Senate Reform Reference about the role of...
In the modern jurisprudence of the United States Supreme Court, the controversy over the place of me...
The Senate Reference is ultimately a decision about how democratic decision-making ought to be condu...
From the standpoint of traditional legal thought, metaphor is at best a dash of poetry adorning lawy...
Part I below explores the interpretive approaches of three other high national courts that have enga...
A metaphor has always dominated the Supreme Court\u27s religion clause jurisprudence. The metaphor p...
In the Senate Reform Reference of 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the Harper government’s...
The chapter discusses the impact of judicial frame on the Courts legal reasoning, by pointing out th...
Dominant narratives about the institutional life of the Supreme Court of Canada pay too little atten...