Preface
Introduction
Part 1: Poverty and Rights: Reading Gosselin
1 Reality checks: Presuming Innocence and Proving Guilt in Charter Welfare Cases / Martha Jackman
2 But It’s for Your Own Good / Diane Pothier
3 Social Rights and Judicial Competence / David Schneiderman
Part 2: Social Citizenship and the State
4 Claiming Adjudicative space: Social Rights and Citizenship / Bruce Porter
5 Aboriginal Women Unmasked: Using Charter Equality Litigation to Advance Women’s Rights / Sharon McIvor
6 Welfare Reformed: The Re-making of the Model Citizen / Janet Mosher
7 The “Made in Québec” Act to Combat Poverty and Social Exclusion / Lucie Lamarche
8 Trade Regime Federalism: An Assessment of the Social Union Framework Agreement / Barbara Cameron
Part 3: Social Citizenship and International Contexts
9 Collective Economic Rights and International Trade Agreements: In the Vacuum of post-National Capital Control / Marjorie Griffin Cohen
10 Enforcing Social and Economic Rights at the Domestic Level: A Proposal / Gráinne McKeever and Fionnuala Ni Aoláin
11 Minding the Gap: Treaty Commitments and Government Practice / Shelagh Day
12 Litigating Socio-Economic Rights in South Africa: How Far Will the Courts Go? / Karrisha Pillay
Part 4: Beyond Gosselin: Legal Theory Emboldened
13 Taking Competence Seriously / David Wiseman
14 Dignity, Equality, and Second Generation Rights / Denise Réaume
15 The Charter as an Impediment to Welfare Roll Backs: A Meditation on “Justice as Fairness” as a “Bedrock Value” of the Canadian Democratic Project / Ken Norman
Part 5: Legal Activism Revived
16 Why Rights Now? Law and Desperation / Margot Young
17 The Challenge of Litigating the Rights of Poor People: The Right to Legal Aid as a Test Case / Melina Buckley
18 Charter Rights and Government Choices / Gwen Brodsky