Law v Canada: New Directions for Equality Under the Canadian Charter?

Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 22 (4):641-661 (2002)
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Abstract

The equality provision in section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 1982 was drafted with a vision of promoting substantive equality. Following challenges to this vision during the 1990s by a group of conservative Supreme Court judges, the recent judgment of Iacobucci J in Law v Canada (1999) has been welcomed for reasserting section 15's substantive ideal. But despite the effective manner in which the provision was drafted, and despite the recent guidelines set out in Law, interpretations of section 15 must continue to explore the complexities of intersectional inequalities and clarify any reliance on the ambiguous call to ‘human dignity’ if they are to maintain Canada's position near the forefront of progressive approaches to equality law

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Human Rights: UniversalismandCultural Relativism.Richard Mullender - 2003 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 6 (3):70-103.

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