In Defence of Principles

NGOs and Human Rights in Canada

By Andrew S. Thompson
Categories: Political Science, Law & Legal Studies, Law & Society, Legal History, History, Canadian History, Canadian Political Science, Public & Social Policy
Series: Law and Society
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774818612, 224 pages, September 2010
Paperback : 9780774818629, 224 pages, July 2011
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774818636, 224 pages, January 2011

Table of contents

Preface

Introduction: In Defence of Principles

1 My Brother’s Keeper: The Canadian Council of Churches and the Rights of Refugees

2 The “Misuse” of Freedom? The Canadian Jewish Congress, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, and the Limits of Expression

3 Shocking the Conscience? Amnesty International Canada and Abolition of the Death Penalty

Conclusion: Principles in the Age of Rights

Notes

Selected Bibliography

Index

By tracing how NGOs have advanced and defended human rights in Canada, including through controversial legal cases, this book sheds new light on the evolution of human rights norms in liberal democracies.

Description

Since 9/11 and the onset of the “war on terror,” the principal challenge confronting liberal democracies has been to balance freedom with security and individual with collective rights. This book sheds new light on the evolution of human rights norms in liberal democracies by charting the activism of four Canadian NGOs on issues of refugee rights, hate speech, and the death penalty, including their use of difficult, often controversial legal cases as platforms to assert human rights principles and shape judicial policy-making. The struggles of these NGOs reveal not only the fragility but also the resilience of ideas about rights in liberal democracies.

Reviews

In Defence of Principles is a comprehensive survey of three groundbreaking Charter cases and the NGOs that plunged into the heart of these controversies. Thompson’s book ultimately reminds readers of the fragility of NGOs’ gains in the field of human rights, as the experiences of AI Canada in Kindler and of the CCC in Singh both show. Thompson’s work also describes how NGO intervention is not without its costs. The CCLA and AI Canada, for instance, paid a substantial price in the form of adverse publicity and decreased donations, respectively, for being seen to side with odious individuals (whether a virulent racist or two violent criminals). In spite of these setbacks, the persistence of Singh, Keegstra, and Kindler in current debates on refugees, free expression, and capital punishment remains a legacy of the intervention and bold ideas of Canada’s NGOs.

- Stephen Hsia

This is a well-crafted, subtle, and highly relevant though specialized contribution to human rights and security. Summing up: Highly recommended.

- M.D. Crosston, Bellevue University