In deference of fundamental rights |
Contents
Traditional Juridical Arguments for Fundamental Rights | 11 |
1000 | 159 |
John Rawls Theory of Fundamental Rights | 160 |
103 | 177 |
Chapter | 183 |
An Argument in Support of Fundamental | 189 |
Some Implications for Constitutional Analysis | 217 |
Conclusion | 273 |
Appendix | 281 |
The Entrenched Bill of Rights Argument | 288 |
297 | |
301 | |
About the Author | 307 |
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Common terms and phrases
Amendment appraisal respect argument basic liberties Benthamite Bill of Rights Canada Canadian Bill chap chapter Chief Justice Coke's citizens Coke C.J. common interest common law conception conduct conflict constitutional contemporary values decision due process elaborate Emphasis added entrenched Bill example exercise existence of fundamental free speech freedom of speech Frohwerk funda fundamental freedom fundamental rights greatest number H. L. A. Hart human Ibid individual inner sphere institutional issue Jeremy Bentham John Rawls John Stuart Mill Judge Hand judgment judicial scrutiny justify lawyer legislative supremacy legislature ment mental rights Mill's moral moral-political normative notion obligations one's Parliament political participation potentiality principle problems protection of self-regarding provides public order Quebec reason recognition respect respect for persons restrictions rights and freedoms Robertson and Rosetanni Ronald Dworkin rule utilitarian Secondly section 25 sense of rights social society society's statute supra Supreme Court Theory of Justice tion weak sense