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CLU 3M1 Unit 2 Test Review (Canadian Law) Questions and Answers £10.85
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CLU 3M1 Unit 2 Test Review (Canadian Law) Questions and Answers

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CLU 3M1 Unit 2 Test Review (Canadian Law) Questions and Answers Some of Canada's fundamental freedoms rights include thought, expression, belief, religion, association, peaceful assembly Democratic Rights -Right to vote(within limits, age) -The right to run for political office 7 ...

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  • December 8, 2024
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CLU 3M1 Unit 2 Test Review (Canadian
Law) Questions and Answers
Some of Canada's fundamental freedoms rights include - answer thought,
expression, belief, religion, association, peaceful assembly

Democratic Rights - answer -Right to vote(within limits, age)
-The right to run for political office

7 Sections of Legal Rights - answer Right to an attorney, right to a fair trial, not
subjected to cruel and unusual punishment, tried within a reasonable time,
unreasonable search and seizure, arbitrary detention, life, liberty, and security of the
person

Human Rights Violation- Evolution - answer 1884: The Indian Act is amended to
outlaw cultural and religious ceremonies
1900: Dominion Elections Act- Excludes all minorities from voting
1916: Manitoba grants voting rights to women
1918: Women gain the right to vote in federal elections
1919: Women are allowed to run for Parliament
1928: Alberta passes the sexual sterilization Act (All patients in psychiatric hospitals are
targeted)
1928-29: The Supreme Court of Canada rules that the word 'person' does not apply to
women ('Famous Five' travel to England and successfully have the 'person' case
overturned)
1940: Communist Party of Canada is outlawed(Women in Quebec gain the right to vote)
1942: Japanese Canadians are forcibly removed from their homes and sent to detention
camps
1947: Saskatchewan passes the first ever Canadian human rights law
1948: All people but Indians were given the right to vote (All races)
1960: Status Indians can vote, Canadian Bill of Rights is passed
Dr. Leonard le Vann ran Sterilization hospital

Government Notice - answer Japenese descendents or Japanese people would be
taken away as well as all their belongings

Rights - answer A legal, moral, or social entitlement that citizens can expect, mainly
from the (their) government

Freedoms - answer The right to conduct one's affairs without interference from the
government

, Inalienable Rights - answer Guaranteed entitlements that cannot be transferred from
one person to another

Recognized Rights and Freedoms - answer R&F have been struggled over
thousands of years. people cannot often agree on what R&F's are

Magna Carta(1215) - answer Basic rights in England

Bill of Rights (1869) - answer British Parliament became supreme over monarchy

Declaration of Independence (1776) - answer USA : Thomas Jefferson

Declaration of the Rights of Man(1789) - answer France and USA declare rights to
equality and liberty

Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) - answer Passed by the UN, key
areas of consideration(freedoms)

Overtime Canada has had... - answer Legal slavery, limited voting rights,
discriminatory laws, anti-asian riots, imprisonment based on race

HDI - answer Human Development Index, measure of quality of life using factors like
life expectancy, literacy, access to clean water, income, etc.

The Canadian Bill of Rights - answer Passed under John Diefenbaker(PM) in 1960
Basic Componenets:
-Rights of individuals to life, liberty, personal security, and enjoyment of property
-Freedom of religion, speech, assembly, and association
-Freedom of the Press
-Right to counsel and to a fair hearing

Limitations of the Bill of Rights - answer - 1st it is only a federal statute, does not
apply to the provinces
- 2nd as a statute it could not override other statutes, if it conflicted with another statute
it was up to individual judges to decide which was correct
- 3rd as a statute it could easily be changed by a vote in parliament

Entrenching Rights and Freedoms - answer - Many people did not see the BofR as a
sufficient protection of rights and freedoms, one was Pierre Elliot Trudeau
- His goal was to entrench rights and freedoms as constitutional law
- This was not done easily though, many people did not want to entrench them
- In 1981, nine provinces finally agreed to entrench the Charter but "Quebec"

The Notwithstanding Clause - answer -Gives governments limits power to pass laws
that exempt from the Charter
-This can only happen for five years(but can be renewed)

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