Advancing Social Rights in Canada
- Publisher:
- Irwin Law Inc.
- Publication date:
- 2014-06-15
- Authors:
-
Martha Jackman
Bruce Porter - ISBN:
- 978-1-55221-375-9
Description:
Canada is at a crossroads. The gap between our national self-image as a country that respects human rights and the reality of socio-economic inequality and exclusion demands a re-engagement with the international human rights project and a recommitment to the values of social justice and equality affirmed in the early years of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This book sketches a blueprint for reconceiving and retrieving social rights in diverse spheres of human rights practice in Canada, both political and legal. Leading academics and activists explore how the Charter and administrative decision making should protect social rights to health, housing, food, water and the environment; how homelessness and anti-poverty strategies could incorporate international and constitutional rights; how the federal spending power, fiduciary obligations towards Aboriginal people, and substantive equality for women and people with disabilities, can become tools for securing social rights; and how social protest movements can interact with courts and urban spaces to create new loci for social rights claims. This book provides inspiration as well as an indispensable resource for all those who share an interest in advancing human rights and social justice in Canada.
Index
- Sleeping Rough and Shooting Up. Taking British Columbia's Urban Justice Issues to Court
- Introduction. Advancing Social Rights in Canada
- International Human Rights in Anti-poverty and Housing Strategies. Making the Connection
- Rights-Based Strategies to Address Homelessness and Poverty in Canada. The Charter Framework
- Poverty as a Human Rights Violation (Except in Governmental Anti-poverty Strategies)
- Accountability Regimes for Federal Social Transfers. An Exercise in Deconstruction and Reconstruction
- Challenging Discriminatory and Punitive Responses to Homelessness in Canada
- Immutability Hauntings. Socio-economic Status and Women's Right to Just Conditions of Work under Section 15 of the Charter
- Has Public Protest Gone to the Dogs?. A Social Rights Approach to Social Protest Law in Canada
- Access to Energy. How Form Overtook Substance and Disempowered the Poor in Nova Scotia
- The Right to Safe Water and Crown-Aboriginal Fiduciary Law. Litigating a Resolution to the Public Health Hazards of On-Reserve Water Problems
- Participation and Accountability. New Avenues for Human Rights Engagement with the Distribution of Health Resources in Canada
- Social Rights and Administrative Justice
- Environmental Concerns and the Interdependence of Human Rights. A Path to Political Responsibility?
- Litigating to Advance the Substantive Equality Rights of People with Disabilities
- Preliminary sections