Corps de l’article

Introduction

After thirty years of decision making under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,[1] it is now clear that the Charter has been a disappointment for non-citizens in Canada. What is worse, during the Charter era, Canada has fallen behind many other Western democracies in providing access for non-citizens to international human rights protections. This conclusion is not a surprise to anyone who has been working in the migrant advocacy trenches over the past quarter century, but it is a jarring contrast to the reputation that Canada has sought for itself as an immigrant-welcoming international human rights leader, and it flies in the face of scholarship asserting that human rights have eclipsed citizenship rights.

On the face of it, Canada ought to be as good as it gets for non-citizens’ human rights protections. Canada is a party to most of the major international human rights conventions[2] and is among a handful of states that have committed themselves to a series of optional protocols allowing individuals to bring complaints against it.[3] Canada has a long-standing program for permanent immigration, and immigration is embedded in its national mythology. It is one of the few Western states where survey data continue to show that the population is supportive of immigrants.[4] Indeed, Canada has recently celebrated the twenty-fifth anniversary of the award to “The People of Canada” of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugee’s Nansen Medal for service to refugees.[5] In addition to all of this, Canada has a strong and contemporary constitutional statement of rights. For all of these reasons, the failure of the Charter to deliver on its promise of human rights protections for non-citizens is counterintuitive.

This paper presents a study of all of the Supreme Court of Canada’s Charter-era jurisprudence addressing the rights of non-citizens. It traces the jurisprudential evolution from early decisions strongly supportive of non-citizens’ rights claims to more recent rulings where non-citizens’ rights claims are rejected, sidelined, or even ignored. Patterns in decision making are discernible, and the decline in protections for non-citizens follows logically enough from a series of interpretive stances made relatively early on. There is evidence here of what I have termed “Charter hubris”. This is a leading factor in explaining the current state of affairs, and it works alongside other explanations such as the traditionally broad ambit of discretion in immigration matters and the securitization of all immigration matters in the early twenty-first century. The Supreme Court of Canada is not, of course, the entire story for non-citizens’ rights in Canada. Very few cases ever make it to this pinnacle venue and disproportionately fewer involving non-citizens. But focusing on the Supreme Court is always justified because of its leadership role. To complement this analysis, I have also completed a companion study of international human rights norms in the jurisprudence of Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Immigration and Refugee Board), which makes approximately fifty thousand decisions annually concerning non-citizens.[6]

The paper begins by outlining the early promise of the Singh and Andrews decisions, setting them in the context of scholarship on globalization, citizenship rights, and human rights. I then turn to a brief explanation of the methodology for the rest of the study. The next section presents the Supreme Court of Canada’s Charter-era non-citizen jurisprudence in three thematic groups: cases treated by the Court as rights cases, cases treated as non-rights cases, and refugee rulings. The analysis is rounded out by a brief look at the issue of extradition, some highlights of the unsuccessful applications for leave to appeal, and two cases that do not technically address non-citizens but that have had important implications for non-citizen advocacy. This presentation lays the groundwork for the concluding section, which offers explanations for the trajectory of the jurisprudence and contrasts this trajectory with leading decisions elsewhere.

The argument that the Charter has failed to deliver on its early promise for non-citizens is made out at several levels. Most directly, non-citizens’ Charter claims have rarely been successful. Second, the Supreme Court of Canada has relied exclusively on the Charter even in cases where applicable international human rights may have provided stronger protections for non-citizens. Third, a number of cases that were argued in human rights terms have not been treated as rights claims by the Court. Finally, very few non-citizens’ rights claims have reached the Supreme Court of Canada. In sum, during the Charter era, non-citizens have had little success in making Charter rights claims and even less success in accessing alternative sources of rights protections, the most important and logical of which is international human rights law. This result is especially disappointing as other jurisdictions have made some important advancements in international human rights for non-citizens during this thirty-year time frame.

I. In the Beginning: Singh and Andrews

The Charter era opened with two rulings that made vitally important statements for the rights of non-citizens. The Charter came into force on April 17, 1982. The section 15 equality provisions were delayed to give governments time to bring their legislation into compliance and took effect three years later, on April 17, 1985. In the case of both the generally applicable rights and the equality provisions in particular, the first decision to fully grapple with non-citizens’ rights claims marked an important victory.

This first ruling came in Singh v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),[7] which challenged the existing refugee status determination procedure on the grounds that it did not provide refugee claimants an oral hearing by a decision maker at any point during the multi-layered process. The Court ruled that this was a breach of principles of fundamental justice, and the government responded with a complete overhaul of the refugee determination process and the introduction of a tribunal process for first-instance refugee determination that was, for two decades, widely regarded as one of the fairest refugee determination processes in the world.[8] From a Charter point of view, the key holding was that the Charter’s section 7 protections apply to “every human being who is physically present in Canada.”[9] The Court explicitly rejected a distinction that would have hinged Charter protection to citizenship and similarly rejected a distinction, based on US law, between those present in the country and those seeking entry.[10]

Singh has become part of the mythic foundation of Canadian refugee law. The anniversary of its handing down is celebrated annually as Refugee Rights Day in Canada by the advocacy community.[11] And for those who feel that refugees have too much legal protection in Canadian law, the Singh ruling is the emblem of all that is wrong with the law.[12] In situating Singh as the starting point of the Court’s Charter-era engagement with non-citizens, I must scrutinize the ruling in a way that is discomfiting for mythology but that I hope will affirm the strength of the ruling nonetheless.

The most important observation about Singh—lost in its mythology—is that only three of the six members of the panel used the Charter in coming to their conclusions.[13] Justice Beetz, with whom Justices Estey and McIntyre concurred, decided Singh on the basis of the Canadian Bill of Rights.[14] This undoubtedly came as a great surprise to many, given that by 1985, the Bill of Rights was widely regarded as almost entirely ineffectual.[15] Counsel had not argued the case on the basis of the Bill of Rights, but seven months after the initial hearing, the Court contacted the parties and requested written submissions regarding how the Bill of Rights would apply to the matter at hand. Justice Beetz “refrain[ed] from expressing any views on the question of whether the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is applicable at all.”[16] But aside from this, he offered little to explain this puzzling choice. He limited himself to stating that other rights instruments ought not to fall into disuse, especially when “almost tailor-made for certain factual situations such as those in the cases at bar.”[17] In response, Justice Wilson (writing on behalf of Chief Justice Dickson and Justice Lamer) stated simply, “[S]ince I believe that the present situation falls within the constitutional protection afforded by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, I prefer to base my decision upon the Charter.”[18] Justice Beetz’s stance did not lead to a resurgence of Bill of Rights decision making by the Supreme Court of Canada, nor did it lead to a different result. It faded into the background as Singh became a cornerstone of Charter mythology, undoubtedly aided by the leading roles played by Justices Wilson and Lamer, and Chief Justice Dickson in the early years of Charter jurisprudence. However, in looking back at Singh in light of the subsequent trajectory of decision making regarding non-citizens, it is useful to remember that only three members of the Court ever signed on to the strong position taken.

It is Justice Wilson’s judgment that has stood the test of time and crystallized into what Singh stands for. In addition to the vital holding that the Charter applies to every person physically in Canada, she also concluded that the rights and interests at stake in refugee determination were sufficiently serious that deprivation of those rights “must amount to deprivation of security of the person within the meaning of s. 7.”[19] She further stated that, as a principle of fundamental justice, serious issues of credibility must be determined on the basis of an oral hearing.[20] It was this requirement for an oral hearing (with which Justice Beetz agreed, but without comment on the question of “security of the person”) that meant the existing procedure failed scrutiny.[21] Justice Wilson also sharply dismissed the government’s section 1 argument that oral hearings would be too resource intensive to be practicable.[22]

Importantly, in terms of how non-citizens in Canada access international human rights norms, Justice Wilson drew on international standards in two ways. While there was no issue of interpretation of the Refugee Convention at stake, she did turn to the Refugee Convention and cited its preamble in assessing the importance of the rights at stake.[23] In developing this reasoning, she relied explicitly on the Immigration Act’s objective of fulfilling Canada’s international legal obligations.[24] Even more importantly, in developing her understanding of the substance of “security of the person”, she turned to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, concerning article 25’s statement regarding the necessaries of life.[25] This interpretive move is important because it draws a direct linkage between international human rights and the Charter and, in a different way, because it establishes a very expansive paradigm for security of the person. Justice Wilson did acknowledge that this breadth of interpretation was not necessary on the facts in Singh, but she introduced the broad parameters nonetheless.[26] In sum, the Singh decision brought non-citizens, regardless of immigration status, within the protection of the Charter and linked that protection in the broadest possible way to international human rights law, even the unenforceable Universal Declaration.

The second Charter decision that addressed the rights of non-citizens went even further. Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia[27] was the Supreme Court of Canada’s first ruling on the section 15 equality rights, and its lore is even greater than that of Singh because of the broad applicability of equality rights.[28] The core of this ruling was to mark out the Court’s “substantive” approach to equality and to clearly establish that grounds of discrimination “analogous” to those enumerated in section 15 could receive Charter protection.[29] The very first analogous ground of protection to be recognized was that of non-citizenship. Mr. Andrews was a permanent resident of Canada and a British citizen, who had been barred from practising law in British Columbia because he was not a Canadian citizen. While the dissentients found this limitation to be a reasonable one and thus would have seen it saved by section 1 of the Charter, all members of the panel agreed that equality protections must protect non-citizens.[30]

Unlike the Singh ruling, there is no reference in the Andrews reasons to international human right standards. The Court did look beyond Canadian borders, to engage seriously with the American constitutional equality jurisprudence, but did not adopt an American approach in full. Importantly for this analysis of non-citizens’ rights, the ruling commented directly on the vulnerability of non-citizens. In Justice Wilson’s words:

Relative to citizens, non-citizens are a group lacking in political power and as such vulnerable to having their interests overlooked and their rights to equal concern and respect violated. They are among “those groups in society to whose needs and wishes elected officials have no apparent interest in attending.” Non-citizens, to take only the most obvious example, do not have the right to vote. Their vulnerability to becoming a disadvantaged group in our society is captured by John Stuart Mill's observation in Book III of Considerations on Representative Government that “in the absence of its natural defenders, the interests [sic] of the excluded is always in danger of being overlooked . . . .” I would conclude therefore that non-citizens fall into an analogous category to those specifically enumerated in s. 15. I emphasize, moreover, that this is a determination which is not to be made only in the context of the law which is subject to challenge but rather in the context of the place of the group in the entire social, political and legal fabric of our society. While legislatures must inevitably draw distinctions among the governed, such distinctions should not bring about or reinforce the disadvantage of certain groups and individuals by denying them the rights freely accorded to others.[31]

Justice La Forest acknowledged the history in Canada of discrimination in employment on the basis of nationality and noted the close linkage between discrimination on the basis of citizenship and discrimination on the named Charter grounds of national or ethnic origin.[32] He concluded in a commonsensical tone, “‘If we allow people to come to live in Canada, I cannot see why they should be treated differently from anyone else.”[33]

There is nothing in the Andrews ruling to foreshadow anything other than a very promising rights environment for non-citizens in the Charter era. The absence of international norms as reference points here is not surprising given that international human rights law does in fact support a distinction on the basis of citizenship in the case of public sector employment, which might have been arguable on these facts.[34] At the very most, we can remark that Andrews is not an immigration case; it has nothing at all to do with crossing borders, and so it is distinct from many of the types of claims to which citizenship becomes relevant. Indeed, the Court goes to some length to focus on the vulnerability and democratic exclusion of non-citizens, despite being presented with a claimant who had many markers of privilege.

The fact that the very first equality challenge of the Charter era involved the rights of a non-citizen, and especially a well-educated permanent resident with citizenship rights in another prosperous Western democracy, fits squarely within the trend—identified by a number of scholars—of human rights eclipsing citizenship rights as an aspect of contemporary globalization.[35] Saskia Sassen has argued that the rise of human rights protections now means that the most meaningful distinction in rights protections is not between citizens and non-citizens, but rather between those with a secure immigration status and those without status.[36] Her analysis fits closely with Justice La Forest’s conclusion that he could not see any basis for treating permanent residents differently “from anyone else”. David Jacobson explored this argument in detail in Rights Across Borders: Immigration and the Decline of Citizenship[37] and added empirical heft to this analysis with his study of judicial decision making.[38] In very broad terms, both Sassen and Jacobson can be cast as viewing this development positively. Assessing the same phenomenon, the success of non-citizens in making rights claims in national courts, Christian Joppke and Gary Freeman each concluded that the strength of human rights claims has risen to the extent that national immigration policy-making (although, in both cases, the authors are talking primarily about the United States) is constrained by the tendency of courts to extend rights protections to immigrants.[39] With varying emphases, Joppke and Freeman both evaluate this turn negatively. Possibly, following the Andrews decision, the Law Society of British Columbia would have agreed.

From the perspective of non-citizens’ rights protections, the rulings in Singh and Andrews fit squarely within the trend of reducing the role of citizenship as an important rights marker. Justice Wilson in Andrews went so far as to state that citizenship “may not even be rationally connected” to the objective of ensuring that lawyers are familiar with Canadian institutions.[40] And the Singh ruling extended the Charter to persons “physically present” in Canada in a way that eclipses even Sassen’s analysis of the importance of legal immigration status. But the trajectory since that time suggests that we are now a long way from this high-water mark. It is no coincidence that this scholarly trend peaked in the 1990s, shortly after the Singh and Andrews rulings. Since that time, citizenship has experienced a resurgence, including steps by a number of Western governments to ensure that the “rational connection” Justice Wilson was skeptical about will be strengthened.[41]

The primary objective of this paper is to examine and explain the experience of non-citizens before the Supreme Court of Canada in the time since these seminal rulings. In part, the Canadian experience fits into a worldwide trend driven forward by globalizing forces and the politics of securitization, but in some key areas, access to international human rights norms has been markedly worse for non-citizens in Canada than elsewhere. The explanation for this discrepancy is subtly rooted in the Charter jurisprudence itself, a point I explore after presenting an overview of the cases. Ultimately, what matters is that individuals’ rights claims are appropriately vindicated. The legal vehicle for achieving this goal is not important. In Canada, however, the key rights sources of the constitution and of international law are intertwined because of the Supreme Court’s early Charter jurisprudence.[42] Non-citizens asserting rights claims are therefore required to make their arguments first and foremost in Charter terms and only secondarily in international human rights terms. This puts non-citizens in Canada in a different position than those in England, Australia, New Zealand, and even in some circumstances, the United States. This different position has become a worse position over time. The requirement that international rights claims must be heard through the vehicle of the Charter has reached the point at which the term “Charter hubris” is apt. This phenomenon can be observed in the relationship between Charter rights and international human rights in the non-citizens’ cases presented here.

II. Methodology: Which Cases Matter and Why

The data set for this study is all the Supreme Court of Canada decisions, since the Charter came into effect, that adjudicate rights claims made by non-citizens. I have selected decisions that deal with the claims of individuals[43] made in situations where non-citizenship is somehow relevant to the legal issues at stake. I have focused on non-citizenship because I am interested in the group of people who are not Canadian, rather than in distinctions that are made between non-Canadians (for example, in refugee claims where one’s state of nationality is of primary importance). The focus on non-citizenship as legally relevant means that the majority of the decisions deal with issues originating in the former Immigration Act or the current Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.[44] There will certainly be any number of cases where the rights of a non-citizen are at stake but in which citizenship is irrelevant to the legal issue at hand. For example, I have not included cases where someone without Canadian citizenship was involved in a criminal matter or a family law matter and the issue of citizenship was not relevant to the case.[45] I have taken a broad approach to the question of what counts as a “rights claim” and therefore have included any claim that could be cast in rights terms, whether or not the Court treated it either as a Charter case or as a rights case more generally. As rights are the basic building blocks of contemporary legal language, this criterion did not lead to any cases being eliminated from the set that would otherwise have been included.

With these parameters, and eliminating the double counting that arises because of companion cases, the data set includes twenty-four decisions, two of which are Singh and Andrews. I have included one decision that at first blush appears at the margin of my parameters. This is Ontario (Attorney General) v. Fraser,[46] which I have included because an important issue of non-citizens’ rights was raised before the Court, although this is not reflected in the decision. During the time frame of this study, the Supreme Court of Canada made 2,755 decisions.[47] It is difficult to get an accurate count of how many of these would be considered Charter decisions, although 490 is a reasonable estimate.[48] In any case, the number of Charter cases would not be an appropriate comparator, because my data set includes a number of cases where the decision does not engage with Charter rights in any way. This is helpful in understanding why I describe the case set as “rights claims by non-citizens during the Charter era.”

It is impossible to say precisely whether twenty-four cases is a “high” or “low” number of decisions. Non-citizens now face two important structural barriers in reaching the Supreme Court of Canada, in addition to the usual barriers of time, money, and a requirement to seek leave. The first of these is that, beginning in 1992, it became necessary to seek leave from the Federal Court, Trial Division (as it then was), in order to have most decisions under the Immigration Act judicially reviewed.[49] The second is that appealing a judicial review from the Federal Court to the Federal Court of Appeal requires that the judge at first instance “certify” that the case raises a serious question of general importance.[50] Some perspective on the twenty-four cases comes from looking at other jurisdictions. Between 1982 and 2011, the High Court of Australia decided 103 cases involving refugee law matters alone.[51] My data set includes only four cases involving refugee law matters. The numbers are high in Australia, in part because the High Court of Australia has an original jurisdiction for judicial review,[52] but by contrast, Australia’s population is thirty per cent smaller than Canada’s and Australia has received approximately one-fifth of the refugee claimants Canada has received over this time frame. It could be argued that the Australian government was more aggressive toward refugees during this time, but in light of the other factors, this is at best a partial explanation. An alternative comparator is the Supreme Court of the United States, which decided twenty-one refugee cases in the same time frame.[53]

There are three groups of cases that I have not included. The first of these is cases that have adjudicated the boundaries of Canadian citizenship. These cases have, in one way or another, focused on who should be considered a Canadian citizen. The focus is not on the rights that non-citizens have but rather on the boundaries of the category. As these cases do not speak to how non-citizens in Canada access rights, they are excluded.[54] The second group is cases that address the reach of the Charter beyond Canadian borders. These cases are principally about the conduct of Canadian officials.[55] While they do sometimes involve questions of how the Charter applies to non-citizens, they are not about how people in Canada can make rights claims. These cases are about things that happen outside of Canada, and on that basis, they have been excluded. Extradition cases are not included in the data set, as citizenship is not a central focus of these proceedings, but they are canvassed later in the paper because of the interesting counterpoint they raise.

III. Mapping the Jurisprudence

Apart from Singh and Andrews, the Supreme Court of Canada assessed a non-citizen’s rights claim on twenty-two occasions in the first thirty years of the Charter. Logically enough, the cases raise diverse issues and can be grouped together in any number of ways. Fifteen of the decisions deal with individuals facing removal from Canada, five deal with people seeking admission, and two have nothing to do with the border setting. Of the fifteen removal cases, four are cases involving refugees or refugee claimants and the central issue involves interpretation of the Refugee Convention. These cases form a distinct subset in that they are directly concerned with international law and they deal with the Charter only in passing. I discuss this distinct group separately. Of the remaining eighteen cases, nine could squarely be considered Charter cases.[56] In six of the cases, there is at least some discussion of international human rights law. Most cases discussing international human rights law are also Charter cases. The one exception to this twinning is Baker v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),[57] which was emphatically not a Charter case. In only one case, Mugesera, the outcome relies directly on international law as a source of direct obligation rather than as an interpretive tool for the Charter. In two other cases, Lavoie and Baker, international law could fairly be said to influence the outcome, although this level of gradation is difficult to be precise about. It is possibly notable that, in both Mugesera and Lavoie, the non-citizen lost at the Supreme Court of Canada level.

With such a small group of cases, the numbers are not particularly meaningful and serve more to introduce the area than anything else. It is important to notice that non-citizens’ cases are most likely to reach the Supreme Court when there is a removal issue at stake. This core issue of a right to remain, on the one hand, pitted against the state’s right to expel, on the other, is at the heart of all immigration law. The right to remain is also central to international refugee law, because the Refugee Convention’s protection against non-refoulement is the oldest and most widely applied constraint, at international law, on a sovereign state’s power to expel non-citizens.[58] Interestingly, separating the removal cases into matters raised by permanent residents and those raised by foreign nationals without permanent status did not prove to be analytically helpful, as will become clear below. To address the substance of both Charter analysis and international human rights engagement, I will discuss three groups of cases. I will first present the ten nonrefugee cases where Charter or international human rights feature in the decision. Following this analysis, I will examine the eight nonrefugee cases where the Court’s response was not cast in rights terms. I will then turn to the group of four refugee law cases. These three groups comprise the data set for the study.[59] Following this presentation, I consider briefly three sets that are outside my selection parameters: cases that were refused leave by the Supreme Court, extradition cases, and cases directly linked to non-citizens. These latter two groups merit a brief canvass in order to fill in the picture of non-citizens’ rights claims in the Charter era.

A. Rights Questions and Rights Answers

Following the ruling in Andrews, the next question of a non-citizen’s rights claim to reach the Supreme Court was Chiarelli in 1992.[60] The central issue was the deportability of a permanent resident who had been convicted of serious crimes in Canada and who was suspected of involvement in organized crime. The Court’s unanimous ruling, and its approach, set in place key principles for non-citizens’ claims that have predominated since. The two most important of these principles were to draw attention to the distinction between citizens and others in section 6 of the Charter and to establish that the relevant context for interpreting section 7 principles of fundamental justice is an immigration context.

Given that the right of a state to deport non-citizens is unchallengeable except in cases of refugee status or a risk of torture, the Chiarelli argument focused on the procedural aspects of reaching a deportation decision. The facts in the case were ideal for raising the distinction between permanent residents and citizens that has been key to the human rights and globalization thesis. Giuseppe Chiarelli had come to Canada as a teenager. As an Italian citizen, he was facing deportation to a prosperous, Western country with a well-developed legal system and a standard of living broadly similar to Canada’s. Furthermore, given his age on emigration, the Court could assume that life in Italy would be familiar to him. Having pleaded guilty to a drug-trafficking charge, as well as a charge of uttering threats to cause injury, he was subject to clear societal condemnation. In short, there was nothing on the facts to cloud a straightforward consideration of the procedural steps required for his removal. An appeal against this order was then possible both on law and fact, as well as on compassionate grounds. The appeal could be suspended if a security review committee, which had the option of holding closed hearings and of keeping evidence secret, decided there were reasonable grounds to believe the person in question would engage in organized criminal activity.

Although the Federal Court of Appeal had split on its assessment of the constitutionality of the scheme, the Supreme Court had little difficulty in deciding that all aspects of the scheme were constitutional. Indeed, the Court did not need to address the question of whether there was any deprivation of life, liberty, or security of the person, because it decided that, in all respects, there was no breach of principles of fundamental justice. Drawing on earlier decisions that the principles of fundamental justice were to be determined by context, the Court considered the immigration context for the first time here. The core of that context was summarized this way: “The most fundamental principle of immigration law is that non-citizens do not have an unqualified right to enter or remain in the country.”[61] The Court supported this reasoning by looking to extradition jurisprudence, to the need to keep Canada from becoming a haven for criminals,[62] and to the Charter’s distinction between citizens and non-citizens. With these framing principles in place, it was a short step to finding that “deportation is not imposed as a punishment.”[63] While deportation may come within the scope of “treatment” in section 12 of the Charter’s protection against cruel and unusual treatment or punishment, it is not cruel and unusual. Indeed, the Court turned its test for the cruel and unusual standard on its head, stating that

[t]he deportation of a permanent resident who has deliberately violated an essential condition of his or her being permitted to remain in Canada by committing a criminal offence punishable by imprisonment of five years or more, cannot be said to outrage standards of decency. On the contrary it would tend to outrage such standards if individuals granted conditional entry into Canada were permitted, without consequence, to violate those conditions deliberately.[64]

Chiarelli was therefore an important starting point for separating citizens from non-citizens in Charter reasoning. The “immigration context” language is important, as the data set shows that almost all Supreme Court cases to which citizenship was relevant are linked in some way to immigration. This step, more than any other, may be the key to understanding how the Court moved away from the promise of Singh and Andrews: those cases are atypical in that they do not fall squarely in the immigration context, as developed by the Court.

The Chiarelli decision is also notable for what it did not say. Importantly, a potential equality rights argument was passed over very quickly, in part because counsel had not made any submissions on the issue.[65] Given this, the Court limited its remarks to agreeing with the Federal Court of Appeal that there was not a section 15 violation and that the Charter specifically provides for “differential treatment of citizens and permanent residents in this regard.”[66] This characterization could be argued to stretch the Charter language somewhat, as the Charter does not explicitly address deportation but rather accords to “citizen[s]” the “right to enter, remain in and leave Canada.”[67] Under the contemporary Canadian approach to equality rights, the requirement of a “comparator group” analysis is challenging for any claim involving immigration legislation, as it is difficult to formulate a comparator group of citizens. In other jurisdictions, however, the fact that legislation applies solely to non-citizens has been an essential basis of a finding of discrimination.[68] Chiarelli also makes no reference to international human rights standards, which could have been adduced to bolster arguments on either side of the central issue.[69]

The Chiarelli approach flowed directly into the next decision to reach the Court, Dehghani.[70] Here, the issue was whether a person who was required to undergo a “secondary” immigration examination upon entering Canada and claiming refugee status, was “detained” so as to trigger the right to counsel provisions of section 10(b) of the Charter. The case followed two high-profile decisions regarding detention and the right to counsel.[71] Mr. Dehghani had been required to wait “approximately four hours” for his secondary interview.[72] The interviewer made extensive notes that were later entered as evidence at what was then called a credible basis hearing. A key issue at that hearing was that Mr. Dehghani had not disclosed, at the airport, the facts this refugee claim would be based on but had instead said that he was making a refugee claim because he wanted to work in Canada and to provide for his children’s futures. Justice Iacobucci, writing for the Court, anchored his analysis with the Chiarelli principle that there is no right for non-citizens to enter Canada and that the “most fundamental principle of immigration law is that non-citizens do not have an unqualified right to enter or remain in the country.”[73] From this starting point, it was a short journey to the conclusion that neither section 10(b) nor the more capacious section 7 was breached in this case.[74]

As in Chiarelli, no international human rights law appears in Dehghani. Here, however, this absence is more remarkable, as there is directly applicable international law on point. The Court’s reasoning in Dehghani merges refugee law and its international rights–based framework directly into the immigration context that began developing in Chiarelli. Unlike immigrants, however, refugee claimants do have a right to enter at international law.[75] In Canada, refugee law and immigration law are linked together in one statutory framework. Refugee law comes directly from international human rights law, and immigration law does not. The Court viewed Dehghani as a case about routine procedure at airports rather than a case about refugee claimants.[76] Beginning from the refugee law frame, however, leads in a completely different direction, as the dissenting voice in the court below demonstrated. Justice Heald stated, “In the case of a refugee claimant such as this claimant, assuming that even a portion of his factual assertions are true, the consequences of his enforced return to Iran could well include incarceration, torture and even death.”[77] Dehghani was an important step in drawing procedural aspects of refugee claims into the evolving immigration context and away from international law. This manoeuvre also served to starkly limit the jurisprudential influence of the Singh decision, which had taken a very different approach to procedural matters involving refugees.[78]

The next case where the Court engaged directly with a rights claim by a non-citizen was the fabled Baker decision handed down in 1999.[79] Baker is the anomaly in this first group of cases, as the decision does not rely directly on either the Charter or on international human rights to arrive at its conclusions. It does, however, fit the parameters of this first group of cases because of its forthright engagement with arguments on both of these grounds and because of the relationship it establishes between Canadian domestic law and international human rights law. The tension between the majority and minority views about this relationship may be partially responsible for the ensuing pattern of engagement with international human rights.

Mavis Baker was poor and mentally ill and had been living in Canada for many years without immigration status when she was ordered eported in 1992. She made an application on humanitarian and compassionate grounds to remain in Canada and to be exempted from various provisions of the Immigration Act. The immigration officer who reviewed her file wrote a negative recommendation about it to his supervisor in terms that can at best be called prejudicial and unprofessional. The Supreme Court’s response became the leading statement on the parameters of the duty of procedural fairness. Ms. Baker had eight children, four of who had been born in Canada, and these children became central to the international human rights arguments made in the case. Because Canada had ratified the Convention on the Right of the Child in 1991, counsel for Ms. Baker, as well as a number of intervenors, argued that the rights of Ms. Baker’s children ought to be taken into account in deciding how to respond to her application for exceptional treatment on humanitarian grounds.[80] Despite its ratification, the Convention on the Rights of the Child had never been implemented into Canadian law and thus could not have any direct application to the case under the Canadian, dualist approach to international law.[81]

Justice L’Heureux-Dubé, writing for the majority, fashioned a response that provided a role for the ratified international human rights provisions. She ruled that Canada’s ratification of the convention was a relevant consideration in the statutory determination exercise undertaken to determine the meaning of “humanitarianism and compassion” in the Immigration Act. Specifically, she wrote:

Another indicator of the importance of considering the interests of children when making a compassionate and humanitarian decision is the ratification by Canada of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the recognition of the importance of children’s rights and the best interests of children in other international instruments ratified by Canada. ... Its provisions therefore have no direct application within Canadian law.

Nevertheless, the values reflected in international human rights law may help inform the contextual approach to statutory interpretation and judicial review. ...

The values and principles of the Convention recognize the importance of being attentive to the rights and best interests of children when decisions are made that relate to and affect their future. In addition, the preamble, recalling the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, recognizes that “childhood is entitled to special care and assistance”. A similar emphasis on the importance of placing considerable value on the protection of children and their needs and interests is also contained in other international instruments. The United Nations Declaration of the Rights of the Child (1959), in its preamble, states that the child “needs special safeguards and care”. The principles of the Convention and other international instruments place special importance on protections for children and childhood, and on particular consideration of their interests, needs, and rights. They help show the values that are central in determining whether this decision was a reasonable exercise of the H & C power.[82]

This creative response was a key aspect of the Court’s favourable ruling on Ms. Baker’s behalf, and it provided an avenue for looking at international human rights law, even when it had not been implemented in domestic law.[83] What it did not do, however, was create a rights platform, either within the Charter or within international law. Justice L’Heureux-Dubé opted not to respond to the Charter arguments put before the Court, stating “[As] the issues raised can be resolved under the principles of administrative law and statutory interpretation, I find it unnecessary to consider the various Charter issues raised.”[84] While in other instances, such as Singh, core administrative law principles have found constitutional backbone in section 7’s principles of fundamental justice, in this case, constitutional rights arguments were raised but not answered. Ironically, in Baker, avoiding the constitution made it easier to engage directly with international law in a statutory interpretation context. However, because this engagement was necessarily indirect, it also meant that Baker was decided wholly on the murky terrain of administrative law and statutory interpretation, and did not lead to a hard, rights-based statement on behalf of non-citizens. Empirically, the Baker decision has been shown to have had little influence in the actual outcomes of applications based on humanitarian and compassionate grounds.[85]

Coming a decade after Andrews, Baker was another high-water mark for non-citizens before the Supreme Court of Canada. And it was an undoubted win for Mavis Baker. But the substantive content of the decision meant that it was not a Charter victory for non-citizens. Indeed, Baker implicitly rejected what was, by 1999, an established paradigm of turning to international human rights statements to interpret Charter rights. The opportunity afforded by this paradigm was lost in this case. The statutory interpretation–based argument, which had such immense potential as penned in 1999, has not provided much traction, proving just as Justice L’Heureux-Dubé asserted, that this approach was hardly revolutionary in the Canadian paradigm of statutory interpretation. Justice Iacobucci, in his minority reasons, averred to the lost opportunity, but it is impossible to do any more than imagine what he would have done with it.[86]

If Baker can still be read as a peak of sorts in the trajectory of non-citizen jurisprudence, Suresh, which came next chronologically in the first group, is definitely a trough.[87] Manickavasagam Suresh came to Canada from Sri Lanka in 1990 and was granted refugee status in 1991. As most refugees do, he applied for permanent residency. While this application was being processed, the Canadian government discovered information indicating that Mr. Suresh was associated with, or at least acted as a fundraiser for, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The government sought to deport him to Sri Lanka on security grounds. Mr. Suresh argued against this deportation on the basis that he would likely be tortured or killed by Sri Lankan authorities if he returned to Sri Lanka. The facts were not disputed before the Supreme Court: the LTTE was a terrorist organization, and the human rights record of the Sri Lankan government included widespread use of torture, especially against LTTE members and sympathizers.[88]

The central question in Suresh was whether the Canadian government could deport a refugee to face a risk of torture. The answer, albeit qualified, was yes. Because the Suresh Court spent little time interpreting the Refugee Convention,[89] I have included this case in the present group rather than in the group of cases that are primarily about interpreting international refugee law for Canada. Suresh is primarily about the Torture Convention and how it is to be applied in Canada. Mr. Suresh’s own refugee status was near to irrelevant at the Supreme Court level, given the Court’s focus on the non-refoulement provision of the Torture Convention.[90]

The focus of the reasoning in Suresh was whether his deportation would be a breach of the section 7 guarantee of no deprivation of life, liberty, and security of the person save according to principles of fundamental justice. After finding that, while torture would not be carried out by the Canadian government, the government would still bear responsibility, the analysis focused on the content of the principles of fundamental justice. The Court articulated both a Canadian perspective and an international perspective on the question of whether such deportation would breach fundamental principles. This strategy draws a distinction between the two and also ensures a useful focus on the relationship between international law and the Charter. Here, as in Baker, the Court was dealing with a ratified convention that had not been directly implemented into Canadian law. The Court described the relationship between the Charter and the international principles as follows:

Insofar as Canada is unable to deport a person to torture where there are substantial grounds to believe he or she would be tortured on return, this is not because Article 3 of the [Torture Convention] ... directly constrains the actions of the Canadian government, but because the fundamental justice balance under s. 7 of the Charter generally precludes deportation to torture when applied on a case-by-case basis. We may predict that it will rarely be struck in favour of expulsion where there is a serious risk of torture. However, as the matter is one of balance, precise prediction is elusive.[91]

While stopping short of pronouncing on whether a prohibition against deportation to a country where an individual will face torture has become a peremptory, or jus cogens, norm within international law, the Court did conclude “that international law rejects deportation to torture, even where national security interests are at stake. This is the norm which best informs the content of the principles of fundamental justice under s. 7 of the Charter.”[92]

In Suresh, the Court followed its established method of using international human rights norms to discern the content of Charter rights, but it concluded that the two kinds of rights are not the same. While international law clearly, possibly even to the point of a jus cogens norm, rejects deportation to torture, the Charter will permit it under particular, if rare, circumstances. Accordingly, Suresh is a clear statement that protection against deportation to face torture is lesser in Canada than it is at international law. Non-citizens in Canada will be protected against deportation to a prima facie risk of torture when, on balance, the minister exercises her or his discretion accordingly.

In Canada, the balance struck by the Minister must conform to the principles of fundamental justice under s. 7 of the Charter. It follows that insofar as the Immigration Act leaves open the possibility of deportation to torture, the Minister should generally decline to deport refugees where on the evidence there is substantial risk of torture.[93]

Following Suresh, ministerial discretion to deport is framed by the constitution, which itself looks to, but does not necessarily follow, international law.

Overall, this is a bad result for non-citizens in Canada. It is not the worst possible result, and Mr. Suresh himself “won” at the Supreme Court level because he had not been accorded sufficient procedural protections.[94] But the principle it establishes—of possible deportation to torture—is damaging. And the method of establishing it—prising apart Charter rights and international rights, and introducing to immigration law the device of “constitutionalized” ministerial discretion—holds the promise of worse to come. It is notable that in the companion case, an Iranian citizen who raised the same argument was found to be deportable because he had been accorded adequate procedural rights and because the finding that he did not face a prima facie risk of torture was reasonable.[95] It is legally irrelevant but impossible to ignore that Suresh was argued in May 2001 and the decision was handed down in January 2002. The Court deliberated throughout the horror of the 9/11 attacks and their aftermath. This was the worst possible time for an individual suspected of raising funds for terrorists to be before any court. Interestingly, despite its origins in the immigration legislation, the section 7 interpretation here did not make reference to an immigration context. Indeed, while the context here was unnamed, the decision shares much with the “security context” that emerged in subsequent immigration cases to come to the Court.

The next case to arise, however, was Lavoie[96] one of only two in the data set dealing squarely with a rights claim by a non-citizen that has nothing to do with the border. Lavoie was handed down eight weeks following Suresh and settled a challenge to the provisions of the Public Service Employment Act,[97] which establish a preference for Canadian citizens in some types of public-service employment competitions. The Court upheld this limitation, with four judges finding an equality rights infringement saved by the “reasonable limitation” analysis of section 1 of the Charter[98] and two additional judges finding no equality rights infringement.[99]

The plurality judges differed sharply on the effect of the provisions. Justice Bastarache, with whom the larger group agreed, reasoned that

the claimants in this case felt legitimately burdened by the idea that, having made their home in Canada, ... their professional development was stifled on the basis of their citizenship status. Their subjective reaction to the citizenship preference no doubt differed from their reaction to not being able to vote, sit in the Senate, serve on a jury, or remain in Canada unconditionally.[100]

Arguing from the proposition that “work and employment are fundamental aspects of this society,” he concluded that “[d]iscriminination in these areas has the potential to marginalize immigrants from the fabric of Canadian life and exacerbate their existing disadvantage in the Canadian labour market.”[101] In assessing whether this limitation is justifiable, Justice Bastarache called attention both to the prevalence of similar provisions in the legislation of other jurisdictions and to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which protects the access of citizens to public-service employment.[102] He also noted that the existing provision is a preference, not a bar, which applies only to open competitions. In contrast to this approach, Justices Arbour and LeBel, in separate opinions, would have found that there was no equality infringement. As Justice LeBel summarized, “The citizenship preference does not affect the essential dignity of non-citizens. It is but a stage in an open process of integration in a fully shared citizenship.”[103]

The dispute among the plurality judges was over the terrain of citizenship and equality. Justice Bastarache’s judgment elevates the importance of work to human dignity and social participation over the other citizenship privileges of formal political participation. This analysis is a strong endorsement of a robust social citizenship reminiscent of the classic T.H. Marshall conception.[104] The reasoning is potentially further reaching than that in Andrews but has been lost because of the ultimate finding in the case. It is also instructive to see how the facts here are distinguished from the Andrews reasoning. It is clear that public-service employment is different from, and more publicly valuable to the state than, working as a lawyer. It is precisely on this point that the dissentients disagree with all of the plurality judges, finding instead that this case is “indistinguishable on the question of discrimination” from Andrews.[105] In terms of access to international human rights norms, in Lavoie, the international instrument was not used in directly interpreting the content of Charter rights, but instead was marshalled—somewhat indirectly—as evidence against the non-citizen claim in the section 1 analysis.

Lavoie joins Andrews as one of only two cases that are centrally focused on the rights claims of permanent resident non-citizens and are distinct from the border-crossing context of immigration law. The other case that considers a nonborder situation, Fraser, does not address non-citizenship directly, but rather, it is relevant only because of the missed opportunity to do so.

The next non-citizen claim to reach the Supreme Court was Mugesera.[106] The central issues before the court were the appropriate standard of review for Immigration and Refugee Board findings of fact and the standards to be met in issuing a deportation order, and thus they were almost entirely in the province of administrative law.[107] As was the case in Baker, the Court did not use the Charter in framing its analysis. Indeed, the only reference to the Charter in the decision appears in the discussion of the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision below.[108] What is notable, however, is that the Court responded to Mr. Mugesera’s arguments with a detailed engagement with international law.

Léon Mugesera was a Rwandan citizen who, along with his family, obtained permanent residency in Canada in 1993. Two years later, the Canadian government became aware that he had delivered a speech at the outset of the Rwandan genocide that arguably incited murder, hatred, and genocide, and was therefore a crime against humanity. The Supreme Court ultimately upheld the Immigration and Refugee Board’s finding that Mr. Mugesera was inadmissible because reasonable grounds existed to believe that he had committed a crime against humanity prior to entering Canada.[109]

The Court in Mugesera issued a unanimous judgment, attributed jointly to all eight members of the panel, and this ruling was the Court’s first opportunity to comment on subsection 318(1) of the Criminal Code, which implements the Genocide Convention.[110] As well, it was a rare opportunity to interpret the 2000 Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act.[111] As befits this context, the reasoning was meticulous, including a brief summary of Rwanda’s history and a full reproduction of a translated version of Mr. Mugesera’s speech. The Court echoed Baker’s reasoning, despite the distinction that here the international standards in question had been explicitly implemented:

The importance of interpreting domestic law in a manner that accords with the principles of customary international law and with Canada’s treaty obligations was emphasized in Baker v. Canada. In this context, international sources like the recent jurisprudence of international criminal courts are highly relevant to the analysis.[112]

The result is the most thorough and nuanced engagement with international law in any Supreme Court case involving the claim of a non-citizen. There is some irony in this fact, given that the international standards are here used against the claims of the non-citizen, but the Court’s approach is wholly admirable in its detailed use of a range of domestic, foreign, and international sources. Mugesera is also distinguishable from many cases in this data set in that the Charter argument that had been influential below was based on section 2(b) free speech protections, and thus this was not a case of turning to international law to interpret the Charter itself. These features make the Mugesera decision stand out despite its commonality with the majority of the cases in the set: at its core, it is an argument by a non-citizen for a right to remain in Canada.

A few months later, the Court ruled in Medovarski.[113] The reach of this decision is limited because it interpreted a transitional provision of the 2002 Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, and thus its specific holding can only apply to other non-citizens whose circumstances overlap the time frames of two pieces of legislation, the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and its predecessor, the Immigration Act. What the Medovarski decision did do, however, was reiterate and extend the Court’s approach to section 7 of the Charter. Two individuals stand behind the Medovarski ruling. Both were non-citizens who had been convicted of crimes in Canada and sentenced to more than two years in jail. As such, under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, they were not entitled to a merits appeal to the Immigration and Refugee Board of their deportation orders.[114] Both appellants argued that Charter rights were engaged because deportation threatens liberty and security of the person. This argument was dismissed with a brief reference to Chiarelli’s ruling that deportation “in itself cannot implicate the liberty and security interests protected by s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.”[115] The Court further held that, even if liberty and security interests were engaged and even if the transition between the two statutes operated unfairly, “any unfairness ... [did] not reach the level of a Charter violation.”[116] Writing for the Court, Chief Justice McLachlin also found that the new legislation indicated an “intent to prioritize security” and that “[t]his [marked] ... a change from the focus in the predecessor statute, which emphasized the successful integration of applicants more than security.”[117] This is, therefore, the first ruling that explicitly names security as an immigration objective. As such, it foreshadows directly the ruling in Charkaoui v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) (Charkaoui),[118] which came seventeen months later.

The Supreme Court of Canada’s ruling in Charkaoui is the most important case postdating Singh and Andrews because of the range of rights it dealt with and because those rights are at the core of democratic governance and the rule of law. While both Singh and Andrews set unique and vital precedents for non-citizens before the courts in Canada, Charkaoui strongly delineated the limits of both equality and liberty, as well as the limits of the rule of law as applied to non-citizens.[119] At issue in Charkaoui were the provisions of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act that allow for the long-term detention without trial of some non-citizens awaiting deportation on the basis of evidence that the state is entitled to keep secret.[120] Adil Charkaoui had been detained in 2003 and, at the time of the hearing, had been recently released on very strict conditions.[121] Hassan Almrei and Mohamed Harkat, whose appeals were joined with Mr. Charkaoui’s, had been jailed even longer.[122] All three men were suspected of terrorist links and activities.[123] Reflecting the importance of the issues at stake, the Court heard the case over three full hearing days, a rare departure from its half-day-per-matter norm and comparable to the four-day hearing for the Quebec secession reference in 1998.[124] Furthermore, eighteen parties were granted intervenor status, which is similarly exceptional.

Charkaoui raised two interrelated issues. The first was to what extent the state is entitled to rely on evidence that it is not willing to make available to the individual concerned because of concerns about national security and to security arrangements shared with other countries. The second is what to do with individuals who cannot be deported because they face a risk of torture, death, or other forms of severe harm if returned to their country of nationality (and, of course, no other country will take them). The second issue picks up directly from the Suresh ruling and examines the consequences of a decision that a person is not deportable. If that person is considered to be dangerous, states have limited options. The provisions challenged in Charkaoui provided for long-term—arguably indefinite—detention in Canada, without trial, for the rare individual who would fall within these provisions and would therefore be subject to what Canadian immigration law calls a “security certificate”.[125] These two issues are not faced by Canada alone, and in the final section of the paper, I will consider the varying responses in other common law jurisdictions. It is worth pointing out that there was never (at least publicly) any serious discussion of prosecuting any of these three men, leaving open the distinct possibility that the government had evaluated the evidence and concluded that it would not withstand the level of scrutiny required by a criminal trial.

The most remarkable observation about Charkaoui, in assessing access for non-citizens in Canada to international human rights protections, is that the unanimous ruling penned by the Chief Justice did not make reference to a single international human rights instrument that is applicable in Canada.[126] This is particularly important in light of the fact that the core liberty rights at issue here are reflected in the most well-established and long-standing international instruments[127] and, as such, have also been interpreted and commented upon by a range of courts and international bodies. This interpretive stance indicates that, by 2007, the Court viewed the content of Charter rights as being fully “domesticated”, capable of being interpreted and adapted on the basis of Canadian insights alone. There are some references to jurisprudence elsewhere, for example, in discussing the United Kingdom’s special advocate procedure as a potential model for Canada,[128] in referencing US and UK decisions concerning indefinite detention of non-nationals,[129] and in commenting on the European Court of Human Rights’ landmark ruling regarding cruel and unusual punishment in the case of the “death row phenomenon” in the United States.[130] These references make up only 10 of the judgment’s 143 paragraphs, and none of them engage with the contents of particular rights. The US and UK cases on indefinite detention are those that would be potentially applicable in Charkaoui, but the Court both distinguishes them[131] and asserts that its ruling is consistent with them.[132] The ruling does not consider the Refugee Convention, despite both Mr. Harkat and Mr. Almrei having refugee status.

The Charkaoui argument comprised an array of Charter challenges to all aspects of the security certificate procedure.[133] The Court found for the appellants on two points: first, allowing no access to the central evidence was a breach of fundamental principles of justice (section 7) that was not justifiable because it was neither minimally impairing nor the least intrusive option; and second, that allowing no review of detention for 120 days for foreign nationals was a breach of protections against arbitrary detention (sections 9 and 10(c)) and should be brought in line with the forty-eight-hour review provision applicable to permanent residents. Overall, the ruling is disappointing for non-citizens. Most importantly, the Court found that, because regular reviews of detention are provided for in the legislation and because guidelines have been developed by the courts, the detention is constitutional, despite the fact that it can continue for an indeterminate amount of time. Reaching this conclusion without reference to international law is doubly surprising.

The Charkaoui ruling made several important statements that may flow into other rulings related to non-citizens. While the issues in Charkaoui were firmly in the province of immigration law, the Court described the context for section 7 rights analysis as a security context rather than an immigration context.[134] This context is a marked departure from that described in Chiarelli. Whether all immigration issues have become security issues remains to be seen, but this possibility was certainly signalled in Medovarski. In quickly dismissing the equality rights arguments about differential treatment of non-citizen terror suspects, the Court stated that “s. 6 of the Charter specifically allows for differential treatment of citizens and non-citizens in deportation matters.”[135] This is a broad stretch from the wording of section 6, which says nothing about deportation and is primarily directed to entry rights for citizens and mobility rights between provinces for citizens and permanent residents.[136] Such an extension of the content of what might previously have been argued to be a statement of a straightforward positive right does not augur well for future distinctions between citizens and non-citizens and cuts directly against the inclusive interpretive spirit of Singh. Indeed, in the UK, the distinction between citizen and non-citizen terror suspects has been found impermissible once deportation is seen as a remote possibility.[137] In Charkaoui, the Court instead found that, despite the lengthy detention and no evidence of impending deportation, the provisions remained meaningfully tied to deportation and therefore permissible.[138] In addition, while the Court found that foreign nationals ought to benefit from the same detention review provisions as permanent residents, the heft of the decision—right from the joining of the cases of two foreign nationals with that of one permanent resident—puts permanent residents firmly on the side of “outsiders” and thus cuts against what might have been read into Andrews.[139]

The most positive statement for non-citizens in Charkaoui may prove to be the clarification that, despite Medovarski and even Chiarelli, the conditions surrounding deportation may engage section 7 rights:

Medovarski thus does not stand for the proposition that proceedings related to deportation in the immigration context are immune from s. 7 scrutiny. While the deportation of a non-citizen in the immigration context may not in itself engage s. 7 of the Charter, some features associated with deportation, such as detention in the course of the certificate process or the prospect of deportation to torture, may do so.[140]

Following Charkaoui, the government altered the legislation to introduce a special advocate procedure and to bring both the review schedule and the burden of proof for foreign nationals in line with those for permanent residents. What remains in Canadian law is a procedure whereby non-citizens can be detained for an indeterminate amount of time on the basis of evidence that they can never see.[141] While it is too soon to see what the full reach of Charkaoui will be, the next opportunity is looming, with the introduction of a new detention scheme that proposes to sharply reduce detention review rights for some refugee claimants.[142]

A follow-up matter, also styled Charkaoui v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),[143] was argued two years after the first hearing. This time, the narrow issues before the Court were the questions of appropriate remedy for destruction and late disclosure of information by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. The Court held that liberty and security interests protected by the Charter were engaged because of the seriousness of the security certificate procedure.[144] This conclusion follows logically from the first Charkaoui ruling. The Court distinguished the duty of disclosure required in this setting from that in a criminal trial and used the Charter as a guide to develop the duty.[145] In regard to the policy of destroying original notes, the Court stated that “the destruction by CSIS officers of their operational notes compromises the very function of judicial review.”[146] Despite this, however, there was no additional remedy for Mr. Charkaoui beyond the postponement that he had already been granted. The Court rejected the application for a stay that would have brought the security certificate proceedings to an end, on the basis that what was at issue was an interlocutory, rather than a final, ruling and that a stay would only be appropriate in the clearest of cases. Instead, the Court ruled that the designated judge would need to take the Charter breach into account in ultimately ruling on the reasonableness of the certificate.[147]

The final case in this section is Fraser.[148] This was a challenge to the 2002 Ontario Agricultural Employees Protection Act, which established a separate labour-relations regime for farm workers in Ontario who were excluded from the Labour Relations Act.[149] The new legislation was challenged on the basis that it infringed association rights by restricting bargaining and on equality grounds for treating agricultural workers differently from other workers. The case raised an important non-citizens’ rights claim because of the high number of non-citizens in the agricultural sector in Ontario and because of the role of Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP).[150] The non-governmental organization Justicia for Migrant Workers was granted intervenor status in the case. In its joint factum with the Industrial Accident Victims Group of Ontario, Justicia for Migrant Workers summarized its argument by saying “that the interests of migrant agricultural workers, other temporary foreign workers and undocumented workers should be further considered and contextualized in the interpretation of these Charter rights.”[151] Its argument directly addressed the vulnerabilities of non-citizen workers and the high levels of risk involved in agricultural work. The ruling in Fraser was a clear statement that rights were breached, but without a clear statement on remedy, its impact is considerably weakened.

Fraser differs from the other cases in the data set because its rights claim was not brought exclusively by non-citizens. Despite this, however, the case must be counted here for two reasons. First, the effect of the impugned provisions on non-citizens was put directly before the Court, and second, it will be difficult for non-citizen agricultural workers to bring a separate challenge to the Court given this ruling. The role of foreign workers in the agricultural sector is well-known, and the facts and arguments on this ground would not have been a surprise to the Court. Nevertheless, all four sets of reasons were silent with regard to non-citizen farm workers. The non-citizenship status of many agricultural workers appears only in Justice Abella’s dissenting reasons in a citation from David Beatty’s work.[152] The majority judges overturned the decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal and upheld the legislation. The ruling draws explicitly on international rights statements in some detail, including two International Labour Organization conventions, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. In short, there is a greater engagement with international human rights in this case than in the more recent cases that explicitly concern non-citizens. Justice Deschamps, in her separate opinion, concurring in the result, did voice the concern of many advocates that it had become very difficult to have “new” grounds of discrimination recognized under section 15.[153] As non-citizenship was recognized as a protected ground as long ago as Andrews, it is perhaps, in hindsight, unfortunate for migrant agricultural workers that the challenge arose in this setting, where the interests of citizens and non-citizens were combined as the interests of “agricultural workers”.

Fraser is the final case where non-citizens’ rights claims were presented to the Court and where the Court responded in rights terms, drawing on the Charter, international standards, or both. Over a thirty-year period, the majority of cases that fit within this framework involved a question of deportation. In a deportation setting, rights language is often ineffectual for individuals, as the right of a sovereign state to control its borders typically emerges as the ultimate “trump” right.[154] This trend is apparent in this data set. Equally, the argument of a number of scholars that permanent residents have rights protections equivalent to those of citizens was less apparent over time in this data set. Permanent residency was a failing argument in Lavoie and Medovarski, and it was irrelevant as a distinction in Charkaoui. Ironically, only in Fraser were citizens and non-citizens treated similarly, to the likely detriment of a discrete non-citizens’ claim. In sum, then, the Supreme Court of Canada rights jurisprudence shows either that the trend toward human rights overwhelming citizen rights has ended or that it was never observable in Canada, Singh and Andrews notwithstanding. This group of cases also demonstrates that the jurisprudence has sharply departed from the promise of Singh and Andrews. None of the subsequent non-citizens cases feature a successful equality analysis, in part because of the difficulty of framing a comparator group affected by the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. In the case of section 7 rights, the broad reach of Singh to extend these rights to everyone and the importance of procedural rights for meaningful refugee protection have vanished into what is now a security context.

These cases, as a group, are the measure of non-citizens’ rights claims before the Supreme Court of Canada in the Charter era. They demonstrate both the extent of rights protections developed explicitly for non-citizens and the capacity of non-citizens to benefit from the protection of international human rights norms. They do not, however, provide the full picture of how non-citizens have fared before the Supreme Court of Canada during the Charter era. To complete the picture, I next address the remaining case groups, before turning to consider what might explain these outcomes, which in important ways, put international human rights protections out of reach for non-citizens in Canada.

B. Cases Without Rights: Making Sense of Rights Claims in the Province of Administrative Law

The second group of cases is where a rights claim of some sort was presented to the Supreme Court of Canada and the Court responded without relying on either the Charter or international human rights law. All of these cases began with a claim related to Canada’s immigration legislation, and thus the terrain covered here is that of administrative law, with its rich array of procedural rights. It is, of course, the case that some procedural claims, such as the one in Singh, have been considered as principles of fundamental justice under section 7 of the Charter. This set of cases, therefore, serves to illustrate the types of claims that have neither become Charter claims nor have triggered an engagement with international human rights. There is a Charter story to be told by noting which potential Charter arguments fail to have any resonance at all.

There is, of course, much shared terrain between this group and the first one. Seven of the nine cases above were challenges to immigration provisions. One of those cases, Baker, has become a cornerstone of Canadian administrative law and is very much part of the landscape of administrative rights protections. Beyond Baker, a number of the non-citizens’ right claims that the Court did respond to in human rights terms also include significant administrative law implications. My explicit focus on investigating whether international human rights norms serve as an alternative to Charter rights does tend to exaggerate the distinction between these two groups, making a hard line appear where a blurred and porous border is more appropriate.

The dominant theme in this group is the ambit of discretion for bureaucratic immigration decision makers at various levels. Chronologically, the first case involving the discretion of immigration officers was the Jiminez-Perez ruling, where the Court affirmed the duty to consider applications made on humanitarian and compassionate grounds and that such consideration could be compelled by the courts.[155] This brief decision predates all of those in the first set, including Singh. The second decision was Prassad, where the Court ruled that an adjudicator conducting an inquiry leading to a deportation order was not required to adjourn and wait for the conclusion of other applications under the Immigration Act.[156] The majority held that whether to adjourn was a matter completely in the hands of the adjudicator.[157] In the 1995 Chen ruling, the Court endorsed the dissentient below in a one-paragraph ruling.[158] At issue was the range of permissible considerations for a visa officer when assessing whether the “points system” score adequately reflects an economic migrant’s likelihood of successful establishment in Canada. The result confined the relevant factors to those connected to making a living in Canada.[159] In the final decision concerning bureaucratic decision makers, Hilewitz v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), the Court ruled in 2005 that it was permissible to consider the personal wealth of an economic-class permanent residency applicant when assessing a question of health inadmissibility on the grounds of anticipated high demand on social services.[160] Intervenors in this case had argued that the statute must be interpreted in light of both the Charter and international human rights, but neither majority nor dissenting judgments approached the case in this way.[161]

A second cluster of cases concerns the roles of immigration tribunals. The first of these, Kwiatkowsky, was argued within weeks of the Charter coming into effect in 1982.[162] Neither party made Charter arguments, and the appellant’s factum was filed before the Charter was in force. The issue was the standard of proof on a preliminary assessment of a refugee redetermination proceeding, and the analysis was a brief and tightly structured statutory interpretation.[163] Interestingly, Justice Wilson drew on this decision in building her Charter argument in Singh.[164] The next case involving immigration tribunals’ roles came twenty years later in the 2002 Chieu ruling. Here, the Court examined the scope of the discretionary jurisdiction of the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board.[165] Under both the former and the current legislation, the IAD has the power to allow a permanent resident who is faced with removal from Canada to remain in the country even though the removal order is correct in both fact and law. This capacity to take other factors into account has become known as the IAD’s “equitable” jurisdiction, in recognition of its fundamental, nonlegal basis.[166] The specific issue was whether the IAD could consider hardships an individual would face in the place to which they would be returned, or whether there was a requirement to limit consideration to “domestic” hardships. The Court upheld the broader view of this provision.[167] In 2009, this equitable jurisdiction was again considered by the Court in Khosa.[168] The key differences were that the legislative description of the power had been changed[169] and that the crucial Dunsmuir ruling concerning standards of review had been handed down in 2008.[170] In Khosa, the Court ruled that IAD decision makers were entitled to a high degree of deference, so need not be “correct” when exercising their equitable jurisdiction.[171] The plurality judgment authored by Justice Binnie chided the Federal Court of Appeal for retrying the case: “[C]learly, the majority felt that the IAD disposition was unjust to Khosa. However, Parliament saw fit to confide that particular decision to the IAD, not to the judges.”[172] Substantively and procedurally, Chieu and Khosa cement the breadth of the IAD’s discretion under both legislative formulations.

The final decision in this group is not about the breadth of discretion but shares a theme with Khosa as the central issue was who got to decide. The 1994 ruling in Reza originated with a refugee claimant who was rejected at an early stage in the process on the basis that his claim had no “credible basis”.[173] Mr. Reza was ordered deported, and he sought leave for judicial review (under the pre-1992 procedure[174]) by the Federal Court of Appeal. When the Federal Court of Appeal denied his application for leave, Mr. Reza turned to the Ontario courts, arguing that deportation would breach his Charter rights. He also sought unique Charter remedies. The Supreme Court ruled that the Ontario courts could not rehear what the Federal Court of Appeal had denied leave to hear. The ruling notes the Charter arguments raised, but does not address them.[175]

This group of cases illustrates that the range of crucial decisions for non-citizens in Canada extends beyond the frameworks of the Charter and international human rights. This observation leads to a number of conclusions. Paramount among these is that discretionary decision making, which occurs outside a legal framework, is enormously important for non-citizens. Several of these cases point directly to key aspects of immigration discretion. For example, the “humanitarian and compassionate” requests at issue in Jiminez-Perez account for approximately ten thousand admissions annually over the past five years.[176] There is no legal standard for these admissions, and the criteria are highly malleable.[177] Similarly, the so-called equitable jurisdiction of the IAD is outside of legal parameters. While there is more shape to this jurisdiction in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act than under the earlier legislation, a decision maker still has recourse to “all the circumstances” of the case. The only decision in this set where the Court ruled to restrict discretionary decision making in any way was Chen, where the Court confined itself to endorsing the dissentient below. While in some circumstances, such as Suresh and Baker, the scope of discretion has been shaped by Charter or international rights, this did not occur in any of these cases.

While all bureaucratic decision makers have some measure of discretion, a number of studies have confirmed that the ambit of discretion is broader in immigration law and have traced this executive power to the strong role for the executive in admission to the state generally.[178] This discretionary space is in turn linked to potential weaknesses of rights claims: once discretionary space is asserted, a rights claim cannot gain any traction. It becomes irrelevant. This is the shift described by Justice Iacobucci, writing for a unanimous Court in Chieu:

In my view, this appeal can be decided by applying principles of administrative law and statutory interpretation, as was the case in this Court’s decision in Baker v. Canada. It is not necessary to address directly the scope and content of ss. 7 and 12 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.[179]

It is therefore true that this set of cases establishes that Charter and human rights concerns will not be relevant for this range of concerns. Charter principles have, however, extended their reach into some areas of administrative law, and thus these responses from the Court could not have been a foregone conclusion.[180]

Finally, while these cases show areas where explicit rights arguments will not take root, it is important not to overlook the powerful remedy provided by procedural rights. A number of these cases were important “wins” for non-citizens. They also serve to confirm the access of non-citizens to the courts and to rule of law principles, both of which are enshrined in important international human rights documents.[181]

C. Refugee Law: An International Human Rights Claim

The third group of cases is those where the Court’s principal ruling involved an interpretation of the Refugee Convention.[182] There are four decisions in the group (with one additional companion ruling). This group is distinct for two reasons. The first is because the central provision of the Refugee Convention, the definition of a refugee, has been incorporated directly into Canadian legislation.[183] This means that access to the international norm is not mediated by Charter interpretation. The second distinction is the uneasy relationship of the Refugee Convention to international human rights law.[184] Refugee law has grown closer to the core of international human rights law over the past two decades, but there is still a gap between the two paradigms.[185] For these reasons, the way the Court approaches refugee law cannot be taken as a proxy for the Court’s approach to international human rights.

It is also important to point out that these cases are not the only cases in the data set to concern refugees. The group is based on an engagement with the Refugee Convention. A number of key cases discussed above did, of course, concern refugees, refugee claimants, or permanent residents who were originally refugees.[186] In one of the cases in the first group, Suresh, the Court did engage with the Refugee Convention in some detail. This engagement, however, was not determinative, and the centerpiece of the rights analysis there was the Convention Against Torture. Justice Wilson’s opinion in Singh did make use of the Refugee Convention but was not a ruling on its interpretation. Singh demonstrated how the Refugee Convention could influence the interpretation of Charter rights, a jurisprudential feat that has not been repeated.

The first refugee case was Ward, handed down in 1993.[187] Ward remains the most important Canadian ruling on interpretation of the refugee definition, and over the intervening two decades, it has been applied almost daily in first-instance refugee decision making at the Immigration and Refugee Board. Ward has also influenced refugee decision makers throughout the common law world.[188]

The Ward Court explicitly embraced an international law approach to interpreting the definition contained in the then Immigration Act. Justice La Forest considered the Refugee Convention’s travaux préparatiores, the views of publicists, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Handbook, and decisions from both within and outside Canada.[189] Most importantly, Justice La Forest began his reasoning with a clear commitment to international law, stating that, “[a]t the outset, it is useful to explore the rationale underlying the international refugee protection regime.”[190] He concluded with a clear statement about the object and purpose of the Refugee Convention, stating that “[u]nderlying the Convention is the international community’s commitment to the assurance of basic human rights without discrimination.”[191] Justice La Forest did not refer to international instruments beyond the Refugee Convention, but his interpretive approach followed established treaty-interpretation rules. Charter arguments were only briefly addressed in the Ward reasons in response to the intervening Canadian Council for Refugees’ argument that section 15 equality jurisprudence ought to determine the interpretation of “particular social groups” in the refugee definition. Justice La Forest found it unnecessary to engage with this argument, given that he had rejected the narrow approach of the court below for other reasons. Despite this explicit ruling, he did turn to Charter reasoning to guide his antidiscrimination approach, drawn from international law and applied to the “particular social group” standard.[192]

The Ward decision set a clear direction for the Supreme Court’s engagement with the Refugee Convention. Undoubtedly influenced by the refugee definition’s direct incorporation into Canadian domestic law, the Court looked to international sources and methods in interpreting the definition. This approach did not include looking at human rights instruments beyond the Refugee Convention, but this international trend in refugee law interpretation was not nearly so well established in 1993 as it is now. The Charter atmosphere of the early 1990s provided a close parallel to Justice La Forest’s view of the Refugee Convention’s purpose as an assurance of “basic human rights without discrimination,” and the idea of an influential atmosphere probably best describes how he turns to Charter jurisprudence without directly engaging the Charter. This is not a case of access to international standards mediated by the Charter. This decision established a pattern in Canadian refugee law of direct access to international interpretations. This approach has shown considerable endurance, in part because the Supreme Court has taken so few opportunities to engage with the Refugee Convention.[193]

The next Refugee Convention case to reach the Court illustrates this point. With only four rulings that hinged on interpreting the Convention over the thirty-year period, Chan v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) is most notable for what it did not do.[194] The appellant in this case was a Chinese national, allegedly fleeing persecution in the form of forced sterilization as a consequence of breaching the PRC’s notorious one-child policy. The majority judges decided on the basis of what they identified as an evidentiary shortcoming at the first instance.[195] In sum, Justice Major wrote that “[t]he appellant failed to adduce any evidence to establish on a balance of probabilities that his alleged fear of forced sterilization was objectively well-founded.”[196] The majority reasons focused entirely on the evidentiary question. Justice Major did make use of the UNHCR Handbook in his reasons, but he did not interpret key aspects of the refugee definition that were potentially at issue. Indeed, the Refugee Convention is silent on evidentiary matters. On the key questions of whether forced sterilization fit within the interpretation of “persecution” and whether the appellant was a member of a “particular social group”, Justice Major assumed, without deciding, that a related case in the Federal Court of Appeal was correct on these points.[197] This approach meant that the Supreme Court of Canada never ruled on these questions, which were key issues for refugee decision makers around the world.[198]

Justice La Forest penned a strongly worded dissent in which he emphasized that “the consideration of basic human rights [is] the appropriate focus of a refugee inquiry.”[199] He followed the interpretive approach he had elaborated in Ward and explored definitions of both “persecution” and “particular social group”.[200]

Three years later, the Court ruled in Pushpanathan, a case interpreting the provisions of the Refugee Convention that exclude people from refugee protection based on categories of bad behaviour.[201] Mr. Pushpanathan was facing deportation because of a drug-trafficking conviction, and the Court was asked to determine whether drug trafficking was “contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations” so as to exclude him from refugee protection. Writing for the majority, Justice Bastarche began his substantive discussion of the Refugee Convention with a review of the principles of treaty interpretation.[202] This approach is, therefore, even more explicit regarding reliance on international law than was Ward, but Justice Bastarche also carefully illustrated that his approach is consonant with Ward on this point.[203] Justice Bastarche discussed the antecedents of the Refugee Convention, the travaux préparatiores, and a range of other international treaties in considerable detail. He concluded that the court below erred because it did not take the correct approach to treaty interpretation.[204] His analysis followed the Vienna Convention’s interpretation rules and focused closely on the object and purpose of both the Refugee Convention and the explicit exclusion provision at issue.[205] This analysis led to a focus on the human rights purpose of the Refugee Convention, as stipulated in Ward, and to the conclusion that drug trafficking, while the subject of serious international condemnation, is not central to the purposes of the United Nations. Leaving open the possibility of a future shift in this positioning, he concluded by saying:

Until the international community makes clear its view that drug trafficking, in one form or another, is a serious violation of fundamental human rights amounting to persecution, then there can be no rationale for counting it among the grounds of exclusion.[206]

Justice Cory, in dissent, would have found that drug trafficking was a central purpose of the United Nations but did not disagree with Justice Bastarache regarding either the interpretive principles at issue or the purposes of the Refugee Convention.[207] Pushpanathan affirmed Ward’s approach to interpreting aspects of the Refugee Convention implemented in Canada’s domestic immigration law as belonging firmly to the international treaty-interpretation framework. It also reaffirmed the Court’s view that the Refugee Convention has a human rights purpose.

It would be twelve years before the Court returned to Refugee Convention as a central issue.[208] Early in 2010, the Court ruled in Németh, addressing the possibility of extraditing refugees. The decision was handed down with a companion ruling, Gavrila.[209] Both Mr. Németh and Mr. Gavrila had obtained refugee protection in Canada because of their risk of being persecuted as ethnic Roma in their respective home countries, Hungary and Romania. In each case, the country of nationality sought extradition on the basis of low-level fraud offences (sums of less than $5,000 were involved in each case) committed prior to departure from the home country, and which included, in Mr. Gavrila’s case, a conviction in absentia.[210] The result in each case was a “win” for the refugee, as the extradition order was found to have been improperly made. But the reasoning draws away from the Ward and Pushpanathan approach, especially by drawing away from international law and from treaty-interpretation principles.

While the Refugee Convention establishes a comprehensive reply to the question of when a refugee can be extradited,[211] in its decision, the Court gave primacy to Canada’s Extradition Act over the international framework.[212] Having decided that Canada’s non-refoulement obligation toward refugees is met through the Extradition Act rather than by applying provisions of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,[213] the Court proceeded to analyze the extradition question with only brief engagement with the Refugee Convention. Justice Cromwell stated that the grounds of protection in the domestic legislation implemented those in the Refugee Convention despite the fact that the two lists are not the same.[214] The Court referenced Pushpanathan and its embrace of the human rights purpose of the Refugee Convention, but did not follow Pushpanathan’s methodology.[215] Instead, interpretation of the Convention’s provisions was guided primarily by domestic Canadian decision making. Most importantly, Justice Cromwell concluded that the question of whether a person is, in his words, “entitled” to refugee status is to be re-asked at the point of considering an extradition request. This procedure therefore upends the Refugee Convention’s approach and puts the article 1F provisions ahead of the article 33 provisions explicitly directed at expulsion of those with refugee status.[216] In addition to being the Court’s most recent statement on how to approach the Refugee Convention, Németh is also the only case in this group that was heard by the full, nine-member Court.[217]

These four cases mark a unique subset of the Supreme Court’s engagement with the international human rights of non-citizens during the Charter era. The refugee cases have been decided with scant reference to the Charter. And cases involving refugees but not the refugee definition have scarcely looked at the Refugee Convention since the Singh ruling, despite the convention’s rich refugee-rights text, which extends well beyond the core definition of a refugee. The early approach was to turn directly to international law and international treaty-interpretation methods. The Court departed from this direction in Németh, but it is too soon to tell whether this direction will be sustained outside the extradition context. While Németh is a regrettable departure from international legal standards, it is too soon to judge whether it indicates that the refugee law cases are following the pattern of the first group, where a strong start at the outset of Charter determination has given way, in more recent cases, to an insular, domestic focus on rights interpretation. As this paper was in its final preparation in the spring of 2012, the Court granted leave in Ezokola v Canada.[218] Thus the Court’s next opportunity to interpret the Refugee Convention is on the near horizon.

This group of cases concludes the picture of the Court’s treatment of rights claims by non-citizens during the thirty-year life of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Before stepping back and offering some possible explanations of this worrisome jurisprudence, there are three more clusters of rulings to mention briefly, which complete the story of the Court’s approach to non-citizens. These clusters concern cases in which the Court refused leave, extradition (outside the refugee context), and two cases where the claims brought by citizens were directly linked to those of non-citizens: Canadian Council of Churches[219] and Mavi.[220]

D. Choosing Not to Decide

The Supreme Court does not give reasons for declining to grant leave, and leave is denied in close to ninety per cent of cases.[221] Nor is it possible to make meaningful comparisons in grant rates in varying areas of law.[222] Finally, it is difficult to accurately count the number of applications for leave that would correspond to my data set in this paper, in part because of the methodological considerations discussed above and in part because of unevenness in how the information is made available.[223] In short, it is important not to make too much of this group of cases.[224] It helps complete the picture, however, to look briefly at matters that the Court has deliberately chosen not to hear, as these cases are indicators both of issues that are unlikely to come before the Court in the short term and of issues that received considerable attention in the advocacy community.

Since the advent of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, the Supreme Court has denied leave in two cases that were directly tied to the question of non-citizens’ access to international human rights norms. In De Guzman,[225] the argument involved the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act’s provision for interpretation “in a manner that ... complies with international human rights instruments to which Canada is signatory.”[226] Advocates had high aspirations for this provision, which the Federal Court of Appeal interpreted as a codification of the Supreme Court’s Baker approach and nothing more.[227] In 2007, the Canadian Council for Refugees, the Canadian Council of Churches, and Amnesty International brought a challenge to Canada’s Safe Third Country Agreement with the United States to the Federal Court.[228] At the trial level, this challenge was successful, and the judgment involved a detailed engagement with both the Charter and international law. The Federal Court of Appeal, however, circumvented the rights questions raised and instead overturned the ruling primarily on the basis of what it called the absence of a “factual basis upon which to assess the alleged Charter breaches.”[229] A Supreme Court of Canada ruling on one or both of these cases would have contributed significantly to the picture of non-citizens’ access to international human rights protections during the Charter era.

Other high-profile cases that did not make it to the Supreme Court include Satiacum, in which an American citizen and hereditary chief of the Puyallup Indians had been found at first instance to be a refugee;[230] Thamotharem, a challenge to significant procedural changes in refugee determinations;[231] Hinzman, where a member of the US military sought, and was denied, refugee status on the basis of his objections to the American role in Iraq;[232] Villafranca, which set the standard for “state protection” analysis in refugee determinations;[233] Langner, affirming that deporting the parents of citizen children did not raise any Charter issues;[234] and most recently, Toussaint, a challenge to fee provisions for humanitarian and compassionate applications.[235] This list is partial, and it is difficult to develop a complete list as the publicly available databases only have a complete list of leaves denied from 1997 onward.[236]

E. Extradition: One Story Worth Telling

The Supreme Court of Canada’s extradition jurisprudence is not part of the data set, because citizenship is not a central criterion in most extradition matters.[237] Factually, of course, because extradition involves alleged criminal activity in another country, the targets of extradition proceedings are frequently non-citizens. Since 1982, thirty-five extradition matters have come before the Supreme Court of Canada. Two of these rulings, Németh and Gavrila, discussed above, raised the question of when a refugee can be extradited and thus involved analysis of the Refugee Convention.[238] Of the remaining thirty-three rulings, fourteen concerned Canadian citizens, four concerned non-citizens, and fifteen judgments did not mention the citizenship of the individual.[239]

The Supreme Court’s work on extradition has, however, produced one important story that provides a fitting counterpoint in my narrative of non-citizens, the Charter, and international human rights norms. The most important extradition case in the Charter era to date is Burns.[240] Burns is important because of its forthright reversal of the Court’s ruling in Kindler, a mere ten years earlier.[241] The ruling is a courageous and unified stance by the Court, directly confronting the possibility of extraditing an individual to face capital punishment in the United States. The Court concluded that assurances that an extradited individual will not be put to death “are constitutionally required in all but exceptional cases.”[242] The Court explicitly rejected the easy route of deviating from the Kindler conclusion because Mr. Burns and his co-accused, Mr. Rafay, were Canadian citizens and Messrs. Kindler and Ng were not.[243] In reaching its conclusion, the Court considered an array of sources, including international law and foreign law from several jurisdictions, and drew particular attention to shifting international initiatives over the preceding decade.[244] In this regard, the Burns decision in 2001 is a paradigmatic reflection of the thesis that international human rights have become more important than citizen rights. This ruling is a strong reflection of the Supreme Court of Canada’s embrace of international human rights law and shows an extensive reliance on an international framework for interpreting the Charter and on shifts within that framework, almost twenty years into the Charter era.[245]

From the point of view of my central argument here, however, the decision in Burns is deeply ironic. It is impossible not to remark the embrace of international human rights in a case where citizenship rights could have led to the same conclusion and equally impossible not to remark that citizenship was the key factual distinction in this high-profile and direct reversal. The Kindler Court had been marked by a strong dissent, with opposing judgments deploying competing rhetoric about Canadian values and Canadian identity.[246] The decision in Burns, while standing staunchly for identical rights and treatment for citizens and non-citizens, provides a hint, to which I shall return in the concluding analysis, that this may not generally be the case before the Supreme Court of Canada.

F. Two Cases Directly Adjacent

There are two additional cases that require some brief comment. Neither case directly involved a non-citizen’s rights claim before the Court, but both are closely linked to non-citizens’ rights, and were supported by the immigration and refugee advocacy community in Canada for that reason. The first of these cases is Canadian Council of Churches, handed down in 1992.[247] The Canadian Council of Churches sought to challenge new legislative provisions introducing changes to Canada’s refugee determination system on the first day that the legislation was in force, arguing that public interest standing was appropriate given the potential harms of the legislation and the time it would take for an affected individual to bring a claim. The government challenged the council’s standing to bring such a claim, and the Supreme Court upheld that challenge. This ruling endured as the limit line for public interest standing throughout most of the Charter era, until late 2012.[248] It has proven a particularly important line for those who are outside of the country and thus is arguably more important for non-citizens than for citizens.[249]

The second case is Mavi, handed down in 2011.[250] Mavi was a challenge brought on behalf of a group of individuals who had sponsored family members to immigrate to Canada, and those family members had later received a variety of social-assistance payments.[251] The payments resulted in “sponsorship debt” obligations. The facts underlying the eight joined cases were compelling, including sponsors who had not known that the payments had been received, sponsors who had become destitute themselves, and sponsors who had actively tried to prevent the payments to their relatives. The Court ruled that the debt was partially contractual and partially statutory. As such, debt collection attracted some measure of procedural fairness but could not be waived.[252] Canadian Council of Churches and Mavi each tell part of the story of advocacy on behalf of non-citizens before the Supreme Court of Canada.

This completes the review of the Supreme Court of Canada’s engagement with non-citizens’ rights claims over the past thirty years. Overall, the arc of this jurisprudence is disappointing. Despite the strong statements at the outset, in Singh and Andrews, non-citizens have had few victories at the Supreme Court of Canada, and crucially, these victories have relied on very few strong statements of Charter rights and even fewer assertions of international human rights. The protection of section 7’s principles of fundamental justice has been limited by an immigration, and most recently a security, context, and the reach of the Refugee Convention has, post-Singh, been narrowed to the refugee definition only. The inclusion of non-citizen status as an analogous ground of equality protection has not led to any successful arguments following Andrews. What remains, then, is to consider what factors might explain this outcome.

IV. Trends, Explanations, Conclusions

Several possible explanations for this trajectory in the jurisprudence come to mind on quick reading. One argument that has had some traction elsewhere is Legomsky’s seminal work, demonstrating that the highest courts of the United States and the United Kingdom have been extraordinarily deferential to executive decision making in matters of immigration.[253] In the same vein, Aleinikoff has argued, in the American context, that immigration is one of the areas that the Supreme Court has viewed as being a particular repository of sovereignty.[254] This is an analysis that I have developed and tested in the Canadian and Australian contexts in earlier work.[255] Another argument that has recently held sway is that law and policy directed toward non-citizens has been influenced by the security turn in global politics following the terrorist attacks of 9/11.[256] It is largely since the security turn that the argument that human rights have overtaken citizenship rights has become less prevalent. The Supreme Court of Canada’s jurisprudence reflects this argument in part, particularly in the shift from an immigration context to a security context for section 7 analyses.

Both of these arguments do contribute part of the explanation for the observable trends in the Supreme Court of Canada’s jurisprudence. For example, the Court, on several occasions, issued a response that “constitutionalized” a space for discretionary decision making, rather than make a hard, rights-based response (Suresh, Baker, Chieu, Charkaoui). This device fits squarely into the exceptional deference pattern. It is certainly the case that the Suresh ruling, as well as Charkaoui and Medovarski, do contain strong security discourses, corresponding to a global swing toward regarding non-citizens through a securitized lens. But neither of these accounts offers a fully satisfying explanation for the Canadian jurisprudence. In the first case, the deference argument was most clearly articulated elsewhere in the mid-1980s, as the Court was penning Singh and Andrews. These rulings that launched the Charter era were not at all deferential. The security argument has been most persuasive elsewhere in explaining executive, rather than judicial, actions, whereas if this argument is to have explanatory power for the Supreme Court of Canada’s rulings, it would need to be adapted to a judicial setting. In the United States and the United Kingdom, however, the contours of this argument point to tensions between the executive and the judiciary. Adding these familiar explanations together can give an account of a number of the cases, but not of a majority of the data set.

It is also the case that the jurisprudence shows some traces of the argument that the distinction between citizenship and permanent residency is waning in importance. In Andrews and Burns, this pattern was discernible. But, as with the first two points, this is not a clear trend. Charkaoui and Lavoie cut in precisely the opposite direction.

What is most striking in this jurisprudence, however, is the ways in which the Canadian Court is out of step with leading decisions on very closely parallel decisions in other, similar jurisdictions. In addition, looking more closely at this dissonance, it appears to be attributable to a different approach to international human rights standards. These two trends are closely interrelated and can be explained at least in part by the Court’s jurisprudential stance toward international human rights norms in the Charter era. It is the explanatory value of how the Court has used the Charter to translate international human rights that emerges most clearly when looking at the whole body of this jurisprudence over the thirty-year period. Broadly speaking, the more recent decisions have less “space” for international law, and this seems to impoverish their reasoning in some ways. All of this requires more detailed attention, to which I now turn to conclude this analysis.

First is the observation that, on some key issues, the Supreme Court has been out of step with other similar jurisdictions. Two vital examples are the questions of deportation to a risk of torture and indefinite detention. The Suresh conclusion that Canada can, in some limited circumstances, deport individuals to torture varies from the conclusion of the [then] House of Lords and the Supreme Court of New Zealand.[257] Both of these courts held themselves bound by the international law. The Supreme Court of Canada clearly agreed about the effect of the international law, but nonetheless left a space for Canadian decision makers to depart from it. On the question of indefinite detention, the House of Lords ruled that once deportation could no longer reasonably be viewed as “imminent”, detention was impermissible.[258] The Supreme Court of the United States made an almost identical ruling on the question of indefinite detention, albeit in a case where a risk of torture had not been established.[259] The Supreme Court of New Zealand went even further, hinging its condemnation of indefinite detention to the provisions of the Refugee Convention.[260] Each of these rulings differs from Charkaoui, where the Court held that a review of detention once every six months ensures that detention will not be indefinite, but stopped short of limiting detention to a particular time or to the feasibility of deportation.

This is not to say that, in every instance or on every issue, non-citizens have encountered more favourable outcomes in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. Such a conclusion would require a detailed consideration of those courts, paralleling the work of this study. Rather, my point is that in two key, high-profile issues, the outcomes differed markedly.

It is also the case that, in issues concerning non-citizens, other courts have tended to draw more directly on international law. This is certainly in the case with the House of Lords and Supreme Court of New Zealand judgments discussed above. Similarly, in a key ruling addressing treatment of non-citizens detained at Guantánamo Bay, the US Supreme Court drew directly on international law in support of rulings against the special military tribunals initially established.[261] All of these rulings depended directly on international human rights norms to assess the rights of non-citizens. This turn toward international human rights is something that the Supreme Court of Canada has not done, aside from in interpreting the Refugee Convention. It is no coincidence that these decisions of the House of Lords, the Supreme Court of New Zealand, and the US Supreme Court have all been recognized as significant rights victories for non-citizens. They have also advanced the international law jurisprudence to new circumstances.

Aside from the Refugee Convention cases, the Supreme Court of Canada has not made a single ruling in the Charter era that directly applies an international human rights norm to a non-citizen in Canada. This would be important, but not legally relevant, if Canada were not a state party to key international human rights instruments.[262] But it is. This would not be important if the Charter were being used to reach the results that international norms would provide. But it is not. As I stated at the outset, if rights are vindicated, the precise legal tool used is far less important than the outcome. In essence, this principle is reflected in the paradigm for Charter rights interpretation: international law will inform Charter rights interpretation, and thus Charter protection will be at least equal to, and possibly better than, what is provided at international law.

This approach was clearly elaborated in early Charter rulings, beginning with Reference Re Public Service Employee Relations Act in 1987, where Chief Justice Dickson wrote, “The content of Canada’s international human rights obligations is, in my view, an important indicia of the meaning of ‘the full benefit of the Charter’s protection’. I believe that the Charter should generally be presumed to provide protection at least as great as that afforded by similar provisions in international human rights documents which Canada has ratified.”[263] In the Slaight Communications ruling two years later, Chief Justice Dickson reiterated this point and went further, saying, “Canada’s international human rights obligations should inform not only the interpretation of the content of the rights guaranteed by the Charter but also the interpretation of what can constitute pressing and substantial s. 1 objectives which may justify restrictions upon those rights.”[264] The Court has not deviated from this commitment over time, reiterating, in 2010, in the specific context of section 7 rights, “The principles of fundamental justice ‘are to be found in the basic tenets of our legal system’: ... [t]hey are informed by Canadian experience and jurisprudence, and take into account Canada’s obligations and values, as expressed in the various sources of international human rights law by which Canada is bound.”[265]

But this review of the non-citizens cases shows that, at least in this setting, the Court’s interpretative paradigm is not delivering on its promise. It also demonstrates that non-citizens’ attempts to make arguments directly based on international human rights have not had any traction whatsoever.[266] The more recent cases tend to have shorter discussions of international human rights norms (Charkaoui, Fraser) or depart overtly from what international law would mandate (Suresh, Németh). Earlier decisions did tend to refer somewhat more routinely to international norms (Singh, Baker).[267] One possible explanation of the current state of affairs is that, in the early years of Charter interpretation, the Court was working out the contents of Charter rights and therefore needed to draw more directly on international standards. As the Charter matured, therefore, less engagement with international human rights would be anticipated. As logical as this may seem, this theory of the linkage between Charter rights and international rights would isolate non-citizens in Canada from progressive developments in international law. This trend is observable in even my brief canvass of high-profile decisions in parallel jurisdictions, but it cannot be doctrinally desirable. By contrast with the non-citizen cases, in some of the rulings “adjacent” to the data set, we find examples of missed opportunities. In Burns, there was a robust engagement with international law to interpret and update the Charter. In Canadian Council for Refugees (the Safe Third Country Agreement decision), the Federal Court had fully canvassed international sources at first instance.

What is observable in this analysis of the non-citizens’ rights claims in the Charter era is a kind of Charter hubris: a jurisprudence that implicitly takes the position that the Charter delivers all the human rights protections that any individual could need. This would be fine, even ideal, if it seemed to be working. That is, if the Charter rights did include, at a minimum, to any new advance in the international sphere, both the law and the range of venues that an individual would need to approach would be simplified. (Indeed, as difficult as it is to reach the Supreme Court of Canada, the hurdles pale in comparison to those involved in getting an implementable outcome from an international body.) Importantly, this progressive incorporation may be precisely how Charter rights and international human rights fit together in other areas—the majority—of the Court’s decision making.[268] This study has not attempted to look beyond the claims brought by non-citizens, and therefore, it has focused on a tiny fraction of the Court’s jurisprudence. A key impetus for this inquiry was to assess and document the extent to which non-citizens in Canada have been able to make use of international human rights. At least at the Supreme Court of Canada level, this study shows that the ability to make arguments drawing on international rights is starkly limited. This conclusion is bolstered by some recent victories in international forums holding that Canada has breached international human rights commitments to non-citizens.[269] It also dovetails with my study of Immigration and Refugee Board decision making, which showed scant attention to international human rights law in that tribunal.[270]

There is certainly more work to be done to fully theorize what this jurisprudence demonstrates and to push forward the consequences of this analysis. But regardless of where the work drawing on these data will lead, it is provocative and doctrinally important to set the cases end to end and to define the terms of the Supreme Court of Canada’s engagement with rights claims made by non-citizens.

Rights protection for non-citizens in Canada is more important now than at any other time in the Charter era. The Canadian government has moved to tighten the boundaries of citizenship, inscribing strong distinctions between citizens and permanent residents.[271] Since the 2002 Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, permanent residents have been more vulnerable to deportation, and new legislation introduced in June 2012 will increase this vulnerability.[272] Beginning in 2009, there has been a marked increase in the number of temporary foreign workers admitted to Canada—individuals who will not have the protections of permanent residency.[273] In 2012, the decision-making framework for refugee protection in Canada was fundamentally altered.[274] All of these shifts mean that non-citizens in Canada are more vulnerable to rights abuses than at any point in the previous thirty years. Non-citizens need the robust protection of both the Charter and international human rights norms. It is time to bring these two bodies of law back into harmony.