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Canada, Law and Public Protest: History
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Ceric, Irina (Author)
Title
            Canada, Law and Public Protest: History
        Abstract
            Moments of protest and rebellion have always challenged systems of power and authority, but particularly since the rise of the liberal democratic state, laws and legal institutions have mediated the tensions and contradictions between individuals, social movements, and the existing order. In the Canadian context, the ongoing history of law and social protest has been shaped by the evolution of a legal framework inherited from England but continually altered by the demands of settlement and nation building, and more recently, by constitutional rights guarantees. While criminalization of dissent, particularly of street demonstrations and other forms of collective action, remains a key issue in studies of the relationship between law and protest, law has also become a tool of resistance in itself, either in conjunction with or instead of other forms of mobilization.
        Book Title
            The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
        Publisher
            John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
        Date
            2009
        Pages
            1-4
        Language
            en
        ISBN
            978-1-4051-9807-3
        Short Title
            Canada, Law and Public Protest
        Accessed
            9/4/23, 9:06 PM
        Library Catalog
            Wiley Online Library
        Extra
            
        Citation
            Ceric, I. (2009). Canada, Law and Public Protest: History. In The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest (pp. 1–4). John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp0291
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