Grounding its approach in historical and discursive institutionalist frameworks, this thesis examines the process of judicial review through an evaluation of Hogg et al.’s Charter dialogue hypothesis as it pertains to judicial invalidation of sections of the Charter of the French Language (CFL) and the legislative sequels produced by the National Assembly of Quebec (i.e. Bills 178 and 86). When examined from an historical institutionalist perspective, the National Assembly of Quebec appears to have strategized its response through an assertion of parliamentary sovereignty, rather than the desire to engage in a “dialogue” with the Supreme Court of Canada. However, a closer examination of how the Bourassa government crafted Bill 178 reveals t...
By suggesting that we view the judicial-legislative relationship as a dialogue, the authors of Char...
grantor: University of TorontoThis work inquires into the idea of the notwithstanding clau...
The francophone and Acadian communities of Canada (hereinafter “FACC”) have until now been the prima...
This article asks whether Quebec has lost relevance in the constitutional politics of language. It p...
A disproportionate number of the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent cases on freedom of religion come ...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
In July 1974, the legislature of Quebec passed an Official Language Act, declaring French to be the ...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees, at section 16, that French and English are t...
[À l'origine dans / Was originally part of : Fac. Droit - Coll. facultaire - Droit constitutionnel e...
In Multani, the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s kirpan case, judges disagree over the proper approach t...
In a recent landmark decision, the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed that the underfunding of Britis...
The Supreme Court’s decision in the Patriation Reference was a landmark in the jurisprudential analy...
The fundamental human rights recognized by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Quebe...
The Charter of Rights has long been criticized for the supposed failure of its proces...
By suggesting that we view the judicial-legislative relationship as a dialogue, the authors of Char...
grantor: University of TorontoThis work inquires into the idea of the notwithstanding clau...
The francophone and Acadian communities of Canada (hereinafter “FACC”) have until now been the prima...
This article asks whether Quebec has lost relevance in the constitutional politics of language. It p...
A disproportionate number of the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent cases on freedom of religion come ...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
For those concerned about the democratic legitimacy of Charter review by Canadian courts, the idea o...
In July 1974, the legislature of Quebec passed an Official Language Act, declaring French to be the ...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees, at section 16, that French and English are t...
[À l'origine dans / Was originally part of : Fac. Droit - Coll. facultaire - Droit constitutionnel e...
In Multani, the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s kirpan case, judges disagree over the proper approach t...
In a recent landmark decision, the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed that the underfunding of Britis...
The Supreme Court’s decision in the Patriation Reference was a landmark in the jurisprudential analy...
The fundamental human rights recognized by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Quebe...
The Charter of Rights has long been criticized for the supposed failure of its proces...
By suggesting that we view the judicial-legislative relationship as a dialogue, the authors of Char...
grantor: University of TorontoThis work inquires into the idea of the notwithstanding clau...
The francophone and Acadian communities of Canada (hereinafter “FACC”) have until now been the prima...