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- catalog contributor b5055923.
- catalog created "1979.".
- catalog date "1979".
- catalog date "1979.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1979.".
- catalog description "Chapter VII: Some implications for constitutional analysis -- Section 1: Which rights are fundamental -- Section 2: The level of judicial scrutiny of legislation -- Section 3: The scope of fundamental rights -- Section 4: Judicial decision-making in constitutional cases".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- catalog description "Part One : Traditional juridical arguments fundamental rights -- Chapter I : Chief Justice Coke's "backward-looking" theory of fundamental rights -- Section 1: Chief Justice Coke's theory of fundamental rights -- Section 2: Some applications -- Section 3: Some problems -- Section 4: Would Coke's method lead to the existence of fundamental rights in Canada? -- Chapter II: The "contemporary values of society" argument -- Section 1: The "shock the conscience" argument -- Section 2: The "majority will" argument -- Section 3: The "supremacy of the legislature" argument -- Chapter III: The "entrenched Bill of Rights" argument -- Section 1: The meaning and scope of the terms of an entrenched Bill of Rights -- Section 2: The standard of judicial scrutiny -- Part Two : The moral-political foundation of fundamental rights -- Chapter IV: The principle of "self-regarding" conduct and the utilitarian perspective -- Section 1: Mill's principle of "self-regarding" conduct -- ".
- catalog description "Section 2: Benthamite utilitarianism and the protection of "self-regarding" conduct -- Section 3: Rule of utilitarianism and the protection of "self-regarding" conduct -- Section 4: Mill's arguments for the protection of "self-regarding" conduct -- Chapter V: John Rawls' theory of fundamental rights -- Section 1: Outline of Rawls' theory -- Section 2: Some unresolved issues with Rawls' theory -- Section 3: Rawls' arguments for the existence of the basic liberties -- Chapter VI: an argument in support of fundamental rights -- Section 1: The development of individuality -- Section 2: The "self" for whom we should have respect -- Section 3: What does it mean to respect a person? -- Section 4: Respect for persons and the "inner sphere of life" -- Section 5: The application of a "respect for persons" argument to "self-regarding" conduct -- Section 6: An argument in support of fundamental rights -- Part Three : Implications for constitutional analysis -- ".
- catalog extent "xix, 307 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "In defence of fundamental rights.".
- catalog identifier "9028603891".
- catalog isFormatOf "In defence of fundamental rights.".
- catalog issued "1979".
- catalog issued "1979.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Alphen aan den Rijn : Sijthoff & Noordhoff,".
- catalog relation "In defence of fundamental rights.".
- catalog subject "Human rights.".
- catalog subject "K3240 .C667 1979".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter VII: Some implications for constitutional analysis -- Section 1: Which rights are fundamental -- Section 2: The level of judicial scrutiny of legislation -- Section 3: The scope of fundamental rights -- Section 4: Judicial decision-making in constitutional cases".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part One : Traditional juridical arguments fundamental rights -- Chapter I : Chief Justice Coke's "backward-looking" theory of fundamental rights -- Section 1: Chief Justice Coke's theory of fundamental rights -- Section 2: Some applications -- Section 3: Some problems -- Section 4: Would Coke's method lead to the existence of fundamental rights in Canada? -- Chapter II: The "contemporary values of society" argument -- Section 1: The "shock the conscience" argument -- Section 2: The "majority will" argument -- Section 3: The "supremacy of the legislature" argument -- Chapter III: The "entrenched Bill of Rights" argument -- Section 1: The meaning and scope of the terms of an entrenched Bill of Rights -- Section 2: The standard of judicial scrutiny -- Part Two : The moral-political foundation of fundamental rights -- Chapter IV: The principle of "self-regarding" conduct and the utilitarian perspective -- Section 1: Mill's principle of "self-regarding" conduct -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Section 2: Benthamite utilitarianism and the protection of "self-regarding" conduct -- Section 3: Rule of utilitarianism and the protection of "self-regarding" conduct -- Section 4: Mill's arguments for the protection of "self-regarding" conduct -- Chapter V: John Rawls' theory of fundamental rights -- Section 1: Outline of Rawls' theory -- Section 2: Some unresolved issues with Rawls' theory -- Section 3: Rawls' arguments for the existence of the basic liberties -- Chapter VI: an argument in support of fundamental rights -- Section 1: The development of individuality -- Section 2: The "self" for whom we should have respect -- Section 3: What does it mean to respect a person? -- Section 4: Respect for persons and the "inner sphere of life" -- Section 5: The application of a "respect for persons" argument to "self-regarding" conduct -- Section 6: An argument in support of fundamental rights -- Part Three : Implications for constitutional analysis -- ".
- catalog title "In defence of fundamental rights / William E. Conklin.".
- catalog type "text".