ID: |
HARP-329 |
Title: |
Justified limits on free expression: the collapse of the general approach to limits on Charter rights |
Source: |
Osgoode Hall Law Journal , v.40(3/4) Wint’02 pg 337-368 |
Parties: |
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Dispute Resolution Organ: |
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Year: |
2002 |
Pages: |
0 |
Author(s): |
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Keywords: |
Canada, constitution, freedom of expression, human rights, legislation, civil and political rights, freedom of thought |
Abstract: |
The author argues that the apparent collapse or erosion of the Oakes test reflects the problem of fitting a right such as freedom of expression, which is social and relational in character, into a structure of constitutional adjudication, which is built on an individualist conception of rights. In the leading Canadian freedom of expression cases, the task for the courts under section 1 is not simply to strike the proper balance between competing interests, but rather to resolve the single but complex question of whether the expression contributes to, or undermines, human agency or autonomous judgment. In these cases, the “value” of expression and the “harm” of expression are not distinct issues, but rather two sides of the same basic issue. Whether expression is more likely to contribute to insight and judgment or to manipulate and lead to an unreflective response is a relative judgment that will depend significantly on the social and economic circumstances in which it occurs. This issue fits awkwardly within an adjudicative structure that is based on an individual liberty model of rights. The author argues that this awkwardness accounts for the “erosion” of the Oakes test in freedom of expression cases and more specifically for the court’s increasing, and inadequately justified, deference to legislative judgment under section 1. |
Secured: |
False |
Download Article: |
Available here |
Keywords: Canada, civil and political rights, constitution, freedom of expression, freedom of thought, human rights, legislation