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... under the GATS with the aim to realize a free trade area in services" (Article 1(c)). As a gener...
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... of Journalists, Canadian Journalists for Free Expression, Canadian Publishers' Council and Briti...• Although free movement of courthouse users is the rule, general or specif...• harassing or following persons in and in front of courthouses, including with cam...
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... to paragraph 2 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Annex 1001.1b-1, Section A... extent possible, barriers to the free movement of persons, goods, services and investments within...
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...The AIT is essentially a domestic free trade agreement. Article 101(1), which defines the... well as to reduce barriers to the free movement of "persons, goods, services and investments withi...
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...(d) introduces minor adjustments to the Tax-Free Savings Account rules and the scientific research ... who engaged in the conduct to compensate persons affected by the conduct, and may issue an interim ... Canada for the purpose of an in-transit movement through Canada to a point outside of Canada 2009. ...
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... egg marketing scheme infringing Charter freedom of association and mobility rights -- Whether egg ... of the Charter guarantees the mobility of persons, not as a feature of the economic unity of the cou...6 is not physical movement to another province, but rather any attempt to cre...
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.... The integration movement developed rapid momentum thereafter. Between July ... discussed and established the Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA), although they delayed... removal of barriers to the movement of persons and goods; the facilitation of access by nationals...
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... Free flow of goods Free flow of services Free flow of... toward managed mobility or facilitated movement of natural persons in trade in goods, services, an...
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In honour of the "Famous Five" who won the battle in 1929 to have women declared "persons" under the BNA Act, there are plaques and parks and a wonderful monument of the five women sculpted by Canadian artist Barbara Paterson.
She was 43 when she moved to Edmonton and helped galvanize Alberta's suffrage movement. But she was "Our Nell" for decades before that. She was raised here, came into her own as a public speaker and novelist in Manitou, and became the most famous women's activist in North America after her family moved to Winnipeg in 1911.
When a visitor remarked on her beautiful garden in Victoria, B.C., near the end of her long and illustrious life, the ailing [Nellie Mooney McClung] replied: "If I were only a few years younger, I'd move tomorrow to Winnipeg with its blizzards.
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..., to reduce or eliminate barriers to the free movement of persons, goods, services and investmen...