15 research outputs found
The Political Impact of the Charter
Ms. Rebick discusses the history of section 15 and argues that it is important to note that it was the womenâs movement and the burgeoning disability rights movement that fought to strengthen the language of section 15 against some considerable resistance on the part of the Liberal government of the day. The strong equality rights language of section 15 is due to the creativity, mobilization, and persistence of the womenâs movement. Whatever the legal impact of the Charter the political impact has been overwhelmingly positive. Whether or not women have actually won rights under section 15, women believe that they have the right to equality and that is incredibly important. In fact, Canadians believe deeply in the equality rights of the Charter and this belief has helped to fuel equality rights movements in Canada that have been mobilizing over the last decades up to and including the most recent example of gays and lesbians in the same-sex marriage struggle. Ms. Rebick notes that the womenâs movement considered the inclusion of section 28 a major victory for equality rights in Canada, our Equal Rights Amendment. Yet in the history of Charter litigation and despite the dismal record of litigation on gender equality for women, section 28 has rarely been used. Lawyers see section 28 as a back up to section 15 rather than as a counter to section 1 and perhaps some discussion on section 28 would be a useful way to improve the court record on womenâs equality
The Political Impact of the Charter
Ms. Rebick discusses the history of section 15 and argues that it is important to note that it was the womenâs movement and the burgeoning disability rights movement that fought to strengthen the language of section 15 against some considerable resistance on the part of the Liberal government of the day. The strong equality rights language of section 15 is due to the creativity, mobilization, and persistence of the womenâs movement. Whatever the legal impact of the Charter the political impact has been overwhelmingly positive. Whether or not women have actually won rights under section 15, women believe that they have the right to equality and that is incredibly important. In fact, Canadians believe deeply in the equality rights of the Charter and this belief has helped to fuel equality rights movements in Canada that have been mobilizing over the last decades up to and including the most recent example of gays and lesbians in the same-sex marriage struggle. Ms. Rebick notes that the womenâs movement considered the inclusion of section 28 a major victory for equality rights in Canada, our Equal Rights Amendment. Yet in the history of Charter litigation and despite the dismal record of litigation on gender equality for women, section 28 has rarely been used. Lawyers see section 28 as a back up to section 15 rather than as a counter to section 1 and perhaps some discussion on section 28 would be a useful way to improve the court record on womenâs equality
Mapeando a imaginação feminista: da redistribuição ao reconhecimento e à representação Mapping the feminist imagination: from redistribution to recognition to representation
Este artigo realiza uma reflexĂŁo sobre como reinventar o projeto feminista em um mundo que se globaliza, a partir de um balanço sobre as mudanças no feminismo no contexto das transformaçÔes no capitalismo pĂłs-guerra e na geopolĂtica pĂłs-comunista. O pĂłs-11 de Setembro significou uma mudança drĂĄstica nas energias feministas, deslocando a ponta-de-lança da luta de gĂȘnero dos Estados Unidos para espaços transnacionais, como a "Europa". O que estĂĄ por trĂĄs dessa mudança geogrĂĄfica e quais sĂŁo as suas implicaçÔes polĂticas para o futuro do projeto feminista sĂŁo questĂ”es que a autora busca responder.<br>On this article the author aims to stimulate discussion as to how reinvent the project of feminism for a globalizing world, situating those shifts, in the context of changes in postwar capitalism and post-communist geopolitics. US feminism finds itself at an impasse, stymied by the hostile, post-9/11 political climate. The cutting edge of gender struggle has shifted away from the United States to transnational spaces, such as "Europe". What lies behind this geographical shif? what are its political implications for the future of the feminist project