It has been 20 years since section 15 of the Charter came into force. In this paper, Professor Hogg traces the “winding course” of judicial interpretation of section 15. The Supreme Court of Canada has changed the ground rules every few years as the judges have journeyed along that winding course. It has been a serious problem for any commentator foolish enough to try and keep a treatise on constitutional law up to date. Professor Hogg discusses the difficulty of applying a guarantee of equality focusing on cases from Andrews to Law and cases subsequent to Law and states that Law has unfortunately supplanted Andrews as the leading case on section 15. The element of human dignity, Professor Hogg points out, effectively sidelines the role of ...
Justice Bastarache made a number of positive contributions to equality law, in respect of both the C...
The author asks whether the Supreme Court’s equality jurisprudence poses a model or standard for the...
Equality is a ubiquitous concept that many assume is intuitively understood. There is however signif...
It has been 20 years since section 15 of the Charter came into force. In this paper, Professor Hogg ...
The authors present an empirical review of courts’ dispositions of legal challenges to government la...
This thesis explores the Supreme Court of Canada’s (SCC) evolving tests for section 15(1) of the Can...
The equality provision in section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 1982 was drafted...
This article presents a novel theory of the concept of substantive equality under section 15(1) of t...
Although both the Canadian Charter and the United States Constitutions protect persons from denial o...
This paper considers the Supreme Court of Canada’s 2007 section 15 jurisprudence, and analyzes the “...
The paper discusses a selection of important cases under section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Right...
On April 17, 1982, Canada repatriated its constitution from the Parliament at Westminster, sweeping ...
This paper reviews the Supreme Court of Canada’s interpretation of s. 15 as a guarantee of substanti...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s articulation for the test for discrimination under section 15 of the C...
The concept of human dignity is an essential and inextricable element of equality rights. In Law v. ...
Justice Bastarache made a number of positive contributions to equality law, in respect of both the C...
The author asks whether the Supreme Court’s equality jurisprudence poses a model or standard for the...
Equality is a ubiquitous concept that many assume is intuitively understood. There is however signif...
It has been 20 years since section 15 of the Charter came into force. In this paper, Professor Hogg ...
The authors present an empirical review of courts’ dispositions of legal challenges to government la...
This thesis explores the Supreme Court of Canada’s (SCC) evolving tests for section 15(1) of the Can...
The equality provision in section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 1982 was drafted...
This article presents a novel theory of the concept of substantive equality under section 15(1) of t...
Although both the Canadian Charter and the United States Constitutions protect persons from denial o...
This paper considers the Supreme Court of Canada’s 2007 section 15 jurisprudence, and analyzes the “...
The paper discusses a selection of important cases under section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Right...
On April 17, 1982, Canada repatriated its constitution from the Parliament at Westminster, sweeping ...
This paper reviews the Supreme Court of Canada’s interpretation of s. 15 as a guarantee of substanti...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s articulation for the test for discrimination under section 15 of the C...
The concept of human dignity is an essential and inextricable element of equality rights. In Law v. ...
Justice Bastarache made a number of positive contributions to equality law, in respect of both the C...
The author asks whether the Supreme Court’s equality jurisprudence poses a model or standard for the...
Equality is a ubiquitous concept that many assume is intuitively understood. There is however signif...