Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
Constitutional commentators who interpret conflicts between individuals and communities in terms of a struggle between individual and collective rights do not accurately capture the jurisprudence developed in the courts regarding such conflicts. Such conflicts are more clearly analyzed when they are framed in terms of identity-related differences. The difference perspective has three advantages over the “individual versus collective rights” perspective. First, the difference perspective accurately retrieves the courts' reasoning by framing it in terms of the values actually at stake. Second, it avoids the traditional dichotomy between individual and collective rights. Third, it provides a means to compare claims of individuals and groups without reducing group interests to individual interests.
Dans la jurisprudence canadienne, les conflits entre individus et groupes sont analysés avec plus de clarté quand ils sont placés dans le cadre des différences relatives à l'identité. La perspective de différence a trois avantages par rapport à la perspective des «droits individuels vis-à-vis des droíts collectifs». Premièrement, la perspective de différence rétablit exactement le raisonnement des tribunaux en la situant en terme des valeurs en jeu. Deuxièmement, elle évite l'opposition habituelle entre les droits individuels et collectifs. Troisièmement, elle fournit un moyen de comparaison des droits des individus et des groupes sans pour autant réduire les intérêts de groupe aux intérêts individuels.
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3 Ibid., 151.
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24 A crucial question is which differences ought to receive protection. On what basis, for example, are identities that rely on sexism or notions of racial superiority denied recognition? Clearly, such identities are sometimes not denied recognition—the most extreme examples include the rise of Nazism in the 1930s in Germany and white supremacist views of Apartheid supporters in South Africa. Political culture, processes and historical circumstances all contribute to determining which differences are chosen to receive recognition and protection. With regard to the question of which differences ought to receive protection, refer to the perspectives offered by Buchanan, Allen E., “Assessing the Communitarian Critique of Liberalism,” Ethics 99 (1989), 852–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Kymlicka, Will, Liberalism, Community and Culture (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989).Google Scholar
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27 The author thanks one of the Journal's reviewers for pointing this out.
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30 The primary purpose here is to outline the relevance of the difference perspective to jurisprudence. I offer observations regarding extra-jurisprudential ways in which a political system can celebrate difference purely in order to illustrate the potential richness of the difference perspective. I return to these possibilities at the conclusion of the article but, again, they are offered speculatively and will not be fully developed here.
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34 Ibid., 163.
35 Ibid.
36 Identity-related arguments are precisely what are determinant in this decision. The decision does not preclude the hypothetical possibility of other groups securing similar fishing rights in the area if they can make the same sort of argument that the Musqueam made.
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48 The efforts of the Native Women's Association of Canada to have some influence over negotiations for Aboriginal self-government are partly intended to steer Aboriginal communities and Canadian governments away from inaccurate and unprogressive interpretations of Aboriginal cultures.
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