- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- William Schabas
- 1 Human Rights and International Criminal Justice in the Twenty-First Century
- 2 William Schabas, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and International Human Rights Law
- 3 The International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, as a Victim-Oriented Treaty
- 4 The Politics of Sectarianism and Its Reflection in Questions of International Law and State Formation in the Middle East
- 5 International Law and the Death Penalty
- 6 The UN Optional Protocol on the Abolition of the Death Penalty
- 7 The Right to Life and the Progressive Abolition of the Death Penalty
- 8 Progress and Trend of the Reform of the Death Penalty in China
- 9 Criminal Law Philosophy in William Schabas’s Scholarship
- 10 Is the ICC Focusing Too Much on Non-State Actors?
- 11 The Principle of Legality at the Crossroads of Human Rights and International Criminal Law
- 12 Revisiting the Sources of Applicable Law before the ICC
- 13 The ICC as a Work in Progress, for a World in Process
- 14 Legacy in International Criminal Justice
- 15 Torture by Private Actors and ‘Gold-Plating’ the Offence in National Law
- 16 Secrets and Surprises in the <i>Travaux Préparatoires</i> of the Genocide Convention
- 17 Perspectives on Cultural Genocide
- 18 Crimes against Humanity
- 19 A New Global Treaty on Crimes Against Humanity Future Prospects
- 20 Justice outside of Criminal Courtrooms and Jailhouses
- 21 Toward Greater Synergy between Courts and Truth Commissions in Post-conflict Contexts
- 22 International Criminal Tribunals and Cooperation with States
- 23 The Arc toward Justice <i>and</i> Peace
- 24 The Maintenance of International Peace and Security through Prevention of Atrocity Crimes
- 25 Law and Film
- 26 The Role of Advocates in Developing International Law
- 27 Bill the Blogger
- Index
William Schabas, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and International Human Rights Law
William Schabas, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and International Human Rights Law
- Chapter:
- (p.39) 2 William Schabas, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and International Human Rights Law
- Source:
- Arcs of Global Justice
- Author(s):
Thomas A. Cromwell
Bruno Gélinas-Faucher
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
More than thirty years have passed since the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms came into effect, and nearly twenty-five years since Professor Schabas submitted his initial important study of the use by Canadian courts of international law in their Charter jurisprudence. This chapter marks Professor Schabas’s scholarly contributions by taking stock of where resort to international human rights law in our Charter jurisprudence has brought Canadian courts and by outlining the challenges that lie ahead. It includes discussion of the impact of the Charter in the dawning of a new era of human rights in Canada, and the present situation regarding international law and the Charter, in particular the role of globalisation on the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of Canada.
Keywords: Canadian Charter, rights and freedoms, human rights, international law, courts
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- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- William Schabas
- 1 Human Rights and International Criminal Justice in the Twenty-First Century
- 2 William Schabas, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and International Human Rights Law
- 3 The International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, as a Victim-Oriented Treaty
- 4 The Politics of Sectarianism and Its Reflection in Questions of International Law and State Formation in the Middle East
- 5 International Law and the Death Penalty
- 6 The UN Optional Protocol on the Abolition of the Death Penalty
- 7 The Right to Life and the Progressive Abolition of the Death Penalty
- 8 Progress and Trend of the Reform of the Death Penalty in China
- 9 Criminal Law Philosophy in William Schabas’s Scholarship
- 10 Is the ICC Focusing Too Much on Non-State Actors?
- 11 The Principle of Legality at the Crossroads of Human Rights and International Criminal Law
- 12 Revisiting the Sources of Applicable Law before the ICC
- 13 The ICC as a Work in Progress, for a World in Process
- 14 Legacy in International Criminal Justice
- 15 Torture by Private Actors and ‘Gold-Plating’ the Offence in National Law
- 16 Secrets and Surprises in the <i>Travaux Préparatoires</i> of the Genocide Convention
- 17 Perspectives on Cultural Genocide
- 18 Crimes against Humanity
- 19 A New Global Treaty on Crimes Against Humanity Future Prospects
- 20 Justice outside of Criminal Courtrooms and Jailhouses
- 21 Toward Greater Synergy between Courts and Truth Commissions in Post-conflict Contexts
- 22 International Criminal Tribunals and Cooperation with States
- 23 The Arc toward Justice <i>and</i> Peace
- 24 The Maintenance of International Peace and Security through Prevention of Atrocity Crimes
- 25 Law and Film
- 26 The Role of Advocates in Developing International Law
- 27 Bill the Blogger
- Index