Articles 2021

Aujourdʼhui
Aujourdʼhui

Can the Government be ‘Cruel’ to a Corporation?

  • 02 mars 2020
  • Ravi Amarnath

Can a corporation challenge a mandatory minimum fine on the basis that it infringes s. 12 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms? This is the question the Supreme Court of Canada will address in Attorney General of Quebec, et al. v. 9147-0732 Québec Inc., which was argued before the Supreme Court in January 2020 and is currently under reserve.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum

Litigating Human Rights, Labour and Employment Cases before Federal Tribunals

  • 13 février 2020
  • Fiona Campbell and Daniel Fong

On November 25, 2019, the CCLHR section and the Young Lawyers’ section held a joint program on appearing before federal administrative tribunals on human rights, employment, and labour issues. The panel featured two adjudicators and two lawyers, who offered information and advice on issues such as the correct forum for litigating disputes, the speed of dispute resolution before the various tribunals, and practice tips for counsel. This article summarizes the program.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum

Human Rights Application Substantially Similar to Civil Action Seeking Damages for Alleged Workplace Harassment Dismissed on Jurisdictional Grounds

  • 29 novembre 2019
  • Giovanna Di Sauro

A review of a recent HRTO decision, in which an applicant's forum choice resulted in her inability to proceed at both the Tribunal and in court. The decision underscores the importance of understanding the interplay between civil and administrative proceedings, and demonstrates the need to carefully evaluate the powers of administrative tribunals to limit or dismiss proceedings when developing a litigation strategy.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum

Freedom of Expression in Municipal Elections: Toronto (City) v Ontario (Attorney General)

  • 23 octobre 2019
  • Joshua Foster and ​Ranjan K. Agarwal

Recently, the Court of Appeal for Ontario was asked to determine the constitutionality of mid-election changes to the City of Toronto's municipal ward structure (City of Toronto v Ontario (AG), 2019 ONCA 732, rev'g 2018 ONSC 5151). While the election that sparked the litigation has long passed, the Court of Appeal's decision nonetheless offers insight on constitutional issues of fundamental and continuing importance.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum

Finally, the World Stands Up!

  • 24 septembre 2019
  • Tahir Khorasanee

Tahir Khorasanee, section editor and associate at Wakelin & Associates, expresses in poetry what inspires him and so many others to battle injustice and oppression. Human rights and civil liberties are essential to the functioning of a democratic society. Without these, there is no democracy and there is no justice.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum

'The Blitz': Will Applicants Pay the Price for the HRTO’s New Expediency?

  • 11 juillet 2019
  • Nicole Biros-Bolton

On May 29, 2019, the Administrative Law, Constitutional, Civil Liberties & Human Rights and Labour & Employment Law sections joined together for The Annual Update on Human Rights. The first presentation developed into a heated debate regarding changes within the newly reformed Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario (HRTO). The panelists were Linda Lamoureux, executive chair of Tribunals Ontario, and Jonathan Batty, Human Rights Tribunal.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum

Ontario Legislature Tables Two New Human Rights Bills

  • 09 mai 2019
  • Giovanna Di Sauro

In the fall of 2018, the Ontario Legislature tabled two bills proposing significant amendments to the Ontario Human Rights Code. If enacted, Bill 35 and Bill 40 would introduce new non-discrimination obligations for provincially regulated employers.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum

British Columbia Court of Appeal Orders Vancouver Transit Authority to Reconsider Selling Ad Space to Anti-abortion Group

  • 01 novembre 2018
  • Ewa Krajewska and Sara A. McGregor

In Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform v South Coast British Columbia Transportation Authority, the British Columbia Court of Appeal unanimously allowed an appeal brought by the Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform, and ordered the South Coast British Columbia Transportation Authority to reconsider its 2015 decision to disallow the pro-life / anti-abortion group to purchase advertising space on public buses.

Droit constitutionnel, libertés civiles et droits de la personne, Student Forum