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Proceed with Caution, or Stop Wherever Possible - Ongoing Paradoxes in Legalized Labour Politics Commentary on Cases, Legislation and Policy
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Bartkiw, Timothy J. (Author)
 
Title
            Proceed with Caution, or Stop Wherever Possible - Ongoing Paradoxes in Legalized Labour Politics Commentary on Cases, Legislation and Policy
        Abstract
            It is fair to say that the first two decades of labour's experience with Charter litigation raised a note of caution concerning its utility as a strategy for labour empowerment. The early refusal of the Supreme Court of Canada, in its widely known "labour trilogy" cases.' to find space within s. 2(d) of the Charter for protection of the right to engage in collective bargaining and the right to strike lett many within the labour movement and the academic community doubtful about labour's prospects in the realm of Charter litigation; such observers suggested that labour must, at a minimum, proceed with caution. There also remained liberal "romantics," who were convinced of the Charter's progressive potential for labour.2 Others associated the proliferation of Charter litigation with the rise of a so- called "Court Party," a complex network of social actors and activists with an increasingly privileged status in Canadian society.'
        Publication
            Canadian Labour & Employment Law Journal
        Volume
            15
        Issue
            1
        Pages
            77-100
        Date
            2009-2010
        Language
            English
        Citation
            Bartkiw, T. J. (2009). Proceed with Caution, or Stop Wherever Possible - Ongoing Paradoxes in Legalized Labour Politics Commentary on Cases, Legislation and Policy. Canadian Labour & Employment Law Journal, 15(1), 77–100.
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