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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN TOPIC ONE: THE CONTEXT, LOGIC & STRUCTURE OF IMMGN LAW TOPIC ONE: THE CONTEXT, LOGIC & STRUCTURE OF IMMGN LAW .....................1 INTRO.....................................................................1 Why Immigration Laws?.................................................1 Development of Immigration Law........................................1 CONTEXT OF IMMIGRATION LAW................................................1 IRPA S3 - The Objectives of the Act...................................2 Historical Context....................................................2 Legal Context of Immigration Law......................................3 Social and Political Context..........................................4 C. Dauvergne article (Appx 1) ..........................................4 THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES – LIBERAL DEBATES AND CHALLENGES.................5 Trebilcock Essay: .....................................................5 Carens ................................................................5 Walter ................................................................5 Galloway ..............................................................6 Catherine Dauvergne ...................................................6 Appx 2 Theoretical Class Exercise.................................................6 OVERVIEW OF THE PROCESS & STATUS OF THE PLAYERS...........................6 Immigrants And Refugees..............................................6 IRPA..................................................................6 1. Citizens (& Indians under the Indian Act)..............................7 2. Permanent Residents....................................................7 Loss of permanent residence status (Romans 2001, Canepa 1997)...........8 3. Foreign Nationals......................................................8 Temporary residents - Students, workers, visitors.....................8 Protected Persons, s. 95, & Refugees..................................9 Undocumented Migrants.................................................9 PROCESS & SUPPORTING PLAYERS............................................... 9 Parliamentary Committee / Governor In Council..........................10 Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) Minister & Delegates..........10 Canada Border Service Agency (CBSA)....................................10 Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) , p. 37 Chart......................10 - Refugee Protection Division........................................11 - Immigration division............................................... 11 - Immigration Appeal Division (Most judicial, of the quasi-judicial). 11 - Refugee Appeal Division (not in place).............................11 Federal Court and Federal Court of Appeal (FC and FCA)...................12 Dilemma of Judicial Review...............................................12 JUDICIAL REVIEW – ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW...................................13 Dunsmuir 2008 SCC - Nature/standard/process/substance of JR..............13 M.C.I. v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12.................................................14 1

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Page 1: ubclss.comubclss.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/... · Web viewTOPIC ONE: THE CONTEXT, LOGIC & STRUCTURE OF IMMGN LAW 1. INTRO 1. Why Immigration Laws? 1. Development of

Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

TOPIC ONE: THE CONTEXT, LOGIC & STRUCTURE OF IMMGN LAWTOPIC ONE: THE CONTEXT, LOGIC & STRUCTURE OF IMMGN LAW.................................................1

INTRO....................................................................................................................................................................1 Why Immigration Laws?..................................................................................................................................1 Development of Immigration Law...................................................................................................................1

CONTEXT OF IMMIGRATION LAW..............................................................................................................1 IRPA S3 - The Objectives of the Act................................................................................................................2 Historical Context..............................................................................................................................................2 Legal Context of Immigration Law..................................................................................................................3 Social and Political Context..............................................................................................................................4

C. Dauvergne article (Appx 1)................................................................................................................................4

THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES – LIBERAL DEBATES AND CHALLENGES....................................5 Trebilcock Essay:.................................................................................................................................................5 Carens ..................................................................................................................................................................5 Walter ...................................................................................................................................................................5 Galloway..............................................................................................................................................................6 Catherine Dauvergne ...........................................................................................................................................6Appx 2 Theoretical Class Exercise..........................................................................................................................6

OVERVIEW OF THE PROCESS & STATUS OF THE PLAYERS...............................................................6 Immigrants And Refugees................................................................................................................................6 IRPA....................................................................................................................................................................61. Citizens (& Indians under the Indian Act)......................................................................................................72. Permanent Residents.........................................................................................................................................7 Loss of permanent residence status (Romans 2001, Canepa 1997)................................................................83. Foreign Nationals...............................................................................................................................................8 Temporary residents - Students, workers, visitors.........................................................................................8 Protected Persons, s. 95, & Refugees................................................................................................................9 Undocumented Migrants...................................................................................................................................9

PROCESS & SUPPORTING PLAYERS................................................................................................................9 Parliamentary Committee / Governor In Council.............................................................................................10 Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) Minister & Delegates.................................................................10 Canada Border Service Agency (CBSA).............................................................................................................10 Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) , p. 37 Chart........................................................................................10 - Refugee Protection Division.............................................................................................................................11 - Immigration division........................................................................................................................................11 - Immigration Appeal Division (Most judicial, of the quasi-judicial)............................................................11 - Refugee Appeal Division (not in place)...........................................................................................................11

Federal Court and Federal Court of Appeal (FC and FCA)...........................................................................12Dilemma of Judicial Review................................................................................................................................12

JUDICIAL REVIEW – ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW.....................................................................................13 Dunsmuir 2008 SCC - Nature/standard/process/substance of JR...................................................................13 M.C.I. v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12..............................................................................................................................14

Substantive Review of Discretionary Decisions...................................................................................................14 Baker v. MCI 1999 SCC (H&C - Pre-Dunsmuir) Hawthorne............................................................................14 Suresh v. MCI 2002 SCC (also pre-Dunsmuir)...................................................................................................14 Procedural Fairness (Suresh, Baker, Ahani, Chark)..........................................................................................15

CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW..............................................................................................................................15 Singh v. MEI 1985 - S7, procedure + torture.....................................................................................................16 Chiarelli v. MEI 1992 (S7, no right ^Reconcilable?) Nguyen............................................................................16 Suresh v. MCI, SCC 2002 (compare with Dadar)..............................................................................................17

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

Guzman v. MCI FC 2006 (S.15) .......................................................................................................................18 Charkaoui v. MCI SCC 2008 (torture + due process).........................................................................................18

INTENATIONAL REVIEW...................................................................................................................................19International Intersections..................................................................................................................................19Individual Complaints.........................................................................................................................................19 Dauvergne: Humanitarian Identity and Nation..................................................................................................19 Dadar: UNCAT (Committee Against Torture) Torture discussion..................................................................19UN Human Rights Committee/Against Torture/Inter-American Commission.............................................20 Tahir Hussain Khan v. Canada.........................................................................................................................20Government Reporting - International obligations &/v. Charter (Baker)...........................................................20

Appx 3 - Exercise on Alice.......................................................................................................................................20

TOPIC TWO: ADMITTING PEOPLE TO CANADATOPIC TWO: ADMITTING PEOPLE TO CANADA........................................................................................20

TEMPORARY RESIDENTS – VISTORS, WORKERS AND STUDENTS......................................................20 Sun Article..........................................................................................................................................................21Requirements........................................................................................................................................................21Conditions of temporary residence Reg. 184.....................................................................................................22Extension and Restoration of Status..................................................................................................................22Breach of conditions work/study permit............................................................................................................22Study Permits ......................................................................................................................................................22 Wang v. Canada 2006 FC..................................................................................................................................22 Kim v. Canada 2004 FC....................................................................................................................................22Work Permits.......................................................................................................................................................22Temporary foreign worker program - Expediant Policies..............................................................................23 Walzer – Guest Workers & Membership............................................................................................................23 Ruhs – The Case for Foreign Worker Programs.................................................................................................24

Macklin – Foreign Domestic Workers in Canada - Live-in Caregiver (+Voluntad)..........................................24

PERMENENT RESIDENTS – ECONOMIC CLASSES.....................................................................................24Selection of Economic Immigrants [Skilled and Business] Reg 70-109..........................................................25 Wroswick/Hollick (& Heibert ) – Declining Earning & Remedies + Riding two horses .................................25Skilled Workers Class Criteria, Reg 75 - 83......................................................................................................26 Dogra - High School Councelor........................................................................................................................27 Sheik - Assessing application - Onus to put best case forward........................................................................27 Chen- bribe, substituted evaluatin....................................................................................................................27Business Immigrants, Reg. 88.............................................................................................................................28 Rahim v. MCI....................................................................................................................................................28Other Economic Classes......................................................................................................................................28Relationship b/w Immigration and Economic growth.....................................................................................29 Callacott – Looming Labour Shortage and Img?...............................................................................................29 Tolley – Skilled Worker Criteria.......................................................................................................................29

Heibert- Poli Econ of Migration in Canada......................................................................................................29 Appx 4 Eg. Beth & Hideo (like-Q on exam*).....................................................................................................29

PERMANENT RESIDENTS - FAMILY CLASS (REUNIFICATION)............................................................30Family reunification - Sponsorship or Include in Application........................................................................30

FAMILY CLASSES, Reg.116-137..........................................................................................................................31Requirements & Exclusions................................................................................................................................31Bona fide relationships........................................................................................................................................32 Sanichara v. MCI 2005 (Look to obvious facts) ...............................................................................................32 Salh 1988 (prior deceit irrelevant - relationship in and of itself).......................................................................32Processing.............................................................................................................................................................32Remedies if an application is refused.................................................................................................................32Spouse (Bhatti)......................................................................................................................................................33

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

CL partner v. Conjugal (Macapagal, Caron).....................................................................................................33Sponsorship Application (incl. processing times).................................................................................................34

Parents & Grandparents (Vaziri, Vong).............................................................................................................34Dependent Child (Sandhu)...................................................................................................................................34Inadmissibility (and effect)..................................................................................................................................34 De Guzman 2005 FCA (spent a lot of time here)...........................................................................................35 Audrey Macklin “Public Entrance/Private membership”...................................................................................36 Guzman v. MCI 2006 FC....................................................................................................................................36

TOPIC THREE: REFUGEE PROTECTIONTOPIC THREE: REFUGEE PROTECTION.......................................................................................................36

REFUGEES: INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT ss. 3, 3(2), 96-98, schedule........................................................36UNHCR - Lesley Stalker Assistant Legal Councel...........................................................................................36Historical Background.........................................................................................................................................37

Definition of refugee from Art.1A(2), ’51 Refugee Convention:......................................................................37 UNHCR [General Assembly] has 2 big arms:...................................................................................................38Revolt & Reform Agenda for Protection ('Crisis and Cure' Hataway)....................................................................38

Non-Refoulement.................................................................................................................................................39Reality...................................................................................................................................................................39Safe Third Country Agreements........................................................................................................................40Canadian Council for Refugees v. MCI, FC/CA on STCA...................................................................................40

REFUGEE PROTECTION IN CANADA - INTODUCTION............................................................................42Convention Refugees and Persons in Need of Protection.................................................................................42“Protected persons”, ss. 95 - 116.........................................................................................................................43How to make a refugee protection claim in Canada:.......................................................................................43Hearing before the RPD -- p. 539* + Charts in Supp. (Crepeau - The Complexity).......................................43After RPD hearing...............................................................................................................................................44Suresh.....................................................................................................................................................................45

ELEMENTS OF THE REFUGEE DEFINTION..................................................................................................45CONVENTION REFUGEE....................................................................................................................................45 Canada (A.G.) v. Ward............................................................................................................................................45

1. Refugee must be outside Country of Nationality/Residence (Williams, Kemel)..........................................452. “Well-founded fear” (of persecution) (Ward, Carillo)..................................................................................463. Unwilling or unable to avail self of State’s Protection (s.108(4)).................................................................46> Internal flight alternative (x state protection) (Thiruavukkarusu)................................................................464. Fear of "Persecution" (Bobrik, Zolfargh, US Military, China Cheug, Salibian) Agents, Gender-based.....475. Grounds for Persecution - Nexus....................................................................................................................48 - Race.................................................................................................................................................................48 - Nationality......................................................................................................................................................48 - Religion...........................................................................................................................................................49 - Political Opinion............................................................................................................................................49 - Membership in a Particular Social Group (V.O.G., Ward, Chan, Mackland)............................................49

EXCLUSION CLAUSES.........................................................................................................................................49Article 1E - Last resort provision (Shamlou, Kroon)............................................................................................49Article 1F – Acts so grave, person is rendered deserving (Jayasacera)...............................................................49

Overlap of criminal/political purpose..............................................................................................................50 Exclusion Clause 1F(a) (Sivakumar, Moreno/Ramerez)......................................................................................50

Exclusion Clause 1f(c) (Pushpanathan)...............................................................................................................51Exclusion Clause 1F(b) (Jayasekara)..................................................................................................................51

PERSON IN NEED OF PROTECTION, S. 97.....................................................................................................51Appx 5 Problems – p. 651-654...............................................................................................................................52

PRRA AND HUMANITARIAN ADMISSIONS...................................................................................................52PRRA Application and Stay....................................................................................................................................52

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

Requirements for PRRA (Raza, Cerilo, Ferguson, Lye, Vagra)..........................................................................52HUMANITARIAN ADMISSIONS, S. 25..............................................................................................................54 Key legislative Provisions......................................................................................................................................54 Baker v. MCI ().......................................................................................................................................................54 Hawthorne v. MCI (judicial review).......................................................................................................................54 Legault v. MCI..........................................................................................................................................................55

TOPIC FOUR – KEEPING PEOPLE OUTTOPIC FOUR – KEEPING PEOPLE OUT..........................................................................................................55

INADMISSABILITY TO CANADA AND REMOVAL ORDERS.....................................................................55 Inadmissibility (upon application).......................................................................................................................55 Inadmissability - Loss of status, s. 44(1)(2) and 45** (subject to a lot of caselaw)............................................55 > Immigration Division Appeals on Loss of Status............................................................................................56 Security, s. 34........................................................................................................................................................56

What is ‘Terrorism’ (Suresh)...........................................................................................................................57 What Involvement is sufficient........................................................................................................................57 Who is a ‘member’ (Poshteh)...........................................................................................................................57 S. Aiken article - Critique..................................................................................................................................57Human Rights Violators (IRPA, s.35)................................................................................................................58 Mugesera............................................................................................................................................................58Criminality – Serious, other, organized.............................................................................................................58 Serious Criminality, s.36(1), 3(3).....................................................................................................................58 Other Criminality (General) s.36(2), 36(3).....................................................................................................59 Some equivalent criminality issues..................................................................................................................59 Li.....................................................................................................................................................................59

Saini..................................................................................................................................................................59 Organized criminality, s. 37.............................................................................................................................59 Chiau.................................................................................................................................................................60Excessive demand – Health conditions, s. 38.....................................................................................................60 Deol/Leg Medical services................................................................................................................................60 Hilewitz Social Services....................................................................................................................................61Financial Reasons, s. 39.......................................................................................................................................61Misrepresentation, s. 40.......................................................................................................................................61Non-compliance with IRPA (S.41)......................................................................................................................61Family Members, s.42..........................................................................................................................................61

Appx 6 - Fact ScenarioHUMAN TRAFFICKING PRESENTATION [John Ferguson], ss. 117-121.....................................................62

[As relates to Refugee Protection/Immg Enforcement].....................................................................................62Perrin – policy article..........................................................................................................................................62V.O.G. (Re), [2006]................................................................................................................................................62C. Dauvergne Ch 5 “Trafficking in Hegemony”...................................................................................................63

REMOVAL AND DETENTION............................................................................................................................63Gibney and Hansen - What, when, why?....................................................................................................................... Removal Orders s.48 49 (Sahakyan, Pancharatnam)...........................................................................................63 Formal “Detention”, s. 54-61, Reg. ss.224-250....................................................................................................64 Detention Process, Review, & Factors.................................................................................................................64

Charkaoui 2007 SCC - security certificate + detention review; s. 33, 77-85.................................................65 Almrei, Harkat and Jaballah...............................................................................................................................66 Deghani 1993 SCC - Interview..........................................................................................................................66

** Exam -- incorporate factual and/or legal issue(s) raised in the JR. (mini-notebook)...................................66

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

TOPIC ONE: THE CONTEXT, LOGIC AND STRUCTURE OF IMMIGRATION LAW←← INTRO← Why Immigration Laws? ← THE MOVEMENT OF PEOPLE ACROSS INTERNATIONAL BORDERS

Freedom of Movement Altruism (media image) Self interest (labour market gaps) Sovereignty of the State to choose (fundamental) Right to asylum (competing need of the individual to the state) Humanitarianism (more than altruism, and less than a right)

←← Development of Immigration Law← Magna Carta – Article 41, 1215← “All merchants shall have safe conduct to go and come out of and into England... for purposes of buying and selling, free of illegal tolls, in accordance with customs..” - Intricate relation with economic and commercial concerns←← R. v. Governor of Pentonville Prison - Lord Denning← - No CML right to enter or immigrate, except as permitted by the State, and crown can impose regulation as it sees fit←← Canada (MEI) v. Chiarelli, & Medovouski← “The most fundamental principle of immigration law is that non-citizens do not have an unqualified right to enter or remain in the country. At CML an alien has no right to enter or remain in the country” – Sopinka J. 1992

Reaffirmed – No CML right to enter or remain in a country (alien) No right claim, short of citizenship The courts have consistently held that immigration is a priviledge not a right See also: Medovarski v. Canada (M.C.I.) (2005)

← YET ← Where there is significant risk at issue, perhaps it’s a rights claim, and state can’t just do whatever it wants.← Singh v. Canada (MEI) – Challenge on basis of S7, risk of their life and personal security

“Given the potential consequences for the appellants of a denial of that status if they are in fact [convention refugees], it seems t me unthinkable that the Charter would not apply to entitle them to fundamental justice in the adjudication of their status” - Wilson , J.. 1985

Crown – But governmental sovereignty – Court rejected the utilitarian considerations; found rights considerations to have a stronger claim.

←← Both the domestic and international jurisprudence suggest that torture is so abhorrent that it will almost always be disproportionate to the interests on the other side of the balance, even security interests. This suggests that, barring extraordinary circumstances (not yet defined), deportation to torture will generally violate that principles of fundamental justice protected by S7 of the Charter← Srech v. Canada (MCI) (2002)←← “The notion of refugee law as a rights based regime is largely illusory”← - James Hathaway←← “The refugee’s role is a humanitarianism claimant seeking the mercy of a nation. A claim for compassion does not effectively function as a right”← - Catherine Dauvergne.←← Class two/three← CONTEXT OF IMMIGRATION LAW← Historical Legal & Socio-economic←← IRPA S3 - The Objectives of the Act

Distinguish immigration and refugee objectives; & the application.

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

All rules are contextualized within this section.←← Historical Context← 1775 - 1872 Regulating entry

Prior to this, not many rules – context of Civil war and the loyalists Distinguished “aliens” and others

o Eg 1873 – registry of information relating to aliens (name, rank, occupation and previous country of residence – or must leave)

o Objective – distinguish “the others” Concerns about immigrant burden (risk)

o Treason or libelous actso Fund to pay for indigent immigrants until they can support their own (economic base)o S 95 – Rules around agriculture (to colonize and establish here)

Classes of those whose entry is prohibitedo Idea that there is actually people who are simply undesirable, where entry should be

prohibited (criminal or viscous classes)o Later added chronic alcoholism, illiteracy, illegitimacy and attempted suicide.o Poor and disabled singled out for being a “public charge.” (1930 esp.)

←← 1878 – 1918 Race based rules

BC was at (-) cutting edge here; tried to pass laws over and over to restrict Asian immigration (very bluntly so); head tax, prohibition outright, literacy or language requirement; Chinese head tax; continuous journey requirement and landing money

Blacks were actively discourages (unsuitable for the climate + India, agreement to restrict Japanese).

Canada v. Singh; re: Munshi Singh (p. 16)o Unsuccessful BC appeal; the balance were sent homeo Order in council required individuals come to Canada in one continuous voyage from Asia

(cannot stop anywhere)o Further: No immigrant of the Asiatic race shall now land in Canada, unless they have at

least $200; CVR explicitly allowed this (minimum amounts varied according to race).o Terms could be race based (unfair or whimsical) because Canadian North American Act

allowed for the creation of any such rules on immigration – within the sovereign power (Even includes British Subjects); Not unconstitutional or Ultra vires. Applicant is not singled out in having to meet requirements of the Act.

o Also reasoning – Rule is here to prevent internal dissent; maintain assimilation and uniformity in the country. “The better classes of the Asiatic races are not given to leave their own countries – those who become immigrants are undesirables; Different racial instincts and character in proper place of residence; where customs are not in vogue, destructive to the well-being of society and against the maintenance of Peace, Order and Good governance.

Restriction still exist – language, employment background, education etc. Provision favouring Europeans’ sponsoring relatives retained until 1967.

← 1919 – 1945 Immigrant classes 1923 Order in council prohibiting entry of all except SIX defined classes of immigrants

(opposite approach)o 1872 – Began selecting “desirable classes of individuals”o Agricultural, farm laborers, female domestic servants (still have), wives and children

under 18 of those resident in Canada (family class - still), US citizens whose labour in requires, British with need for self maintenance.

o Nothing of refugees or asylum seekers NO distinction b/w “refugees” and “immigrants”

o Refugees admitted on a situational basis (denied to jews for those seeking asylum during the war, and intense Japanese discrimination.)

o After the war, restrictive laws continues due to fear of communism.o 1951 UN Convention on the Status of Refugees – Canada didn’t sign until 1969 when the

convention became more broad

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

o Law didn’t change to implement the idea of refugees having special immigration rights until 1975

← 1969 – Now Refugees and immigrants Distinction refuges and immigrants

o Previously only b/w loyalists, and situational refugees Distinction between visitors and immigrants Immigrant class: economic and family

o Refer to criminality, desirability based on economic and social factors; maintain many themes from before

o Protection regimeo 1909 – Ports of entry were establishedo 1967 - Point system for selecting immigrants according to their skills, education, and

work experience introduced. 1978 Immigration Act aimed to systematize and rationalize the law

o Specified general demographic, economic, and humanitarian aims.o It’s continues reformulation in a somewhat haphazard manner in response to publicized

events continued until 2001’s current act. Impact of the Charter of Rights Still Questions of systematic discrimination

o Impact on immigrants and refugees from the Southo Eg. Canadian visa posts around the world, and allocation of resources biased against the

South – Direct impact on number of applications that can be processed in a timely manner

o Direct impact on number of applications that can processed (effectively a quota)o Explicit favouring of young, healthy, skilled and educated (X Women in the South –

denied access to education, training and employment opportunities)o Thus most women come sponsored and men as independentso Maintenance of a ‘head tax’ – “right of permanent residence fee” – disparate impact on

immigrants from some pars of the world.o Visa requirements on nationals of certain countries (less on “white” countries)o Identity docs – harder for refugees

←← Legal Context of Immigration Law← International

International Principles and contained in domestic lawo S3 Application (f) - Radical provision – “complies with international human rights

instruments to which Canada is signatory”o De Guzma, Okoloubu FCA

What rights exist? o At a minimum, turn to the binding instruments to determine rightso EDA, trafficking protocols, CRC, etc.o Sovereigntyo Refugeeso Nationality

←← Domestic/National

Constitutional setting: Federalism and the Charter of Rightso Shared between provinces and federal governmento More emphasis on the Provinces right now - Provincial nominee program; Quebec

nominee program (always had a special place)o S3(3) expressly talks of Legislation as subject to Charter of Rights.

Administrative law: separation of powers and the role of judicial reviewo Cabinet makes decision (legislation and regulations), then the law is further defused by

policy and operational decisions; while the courts retain the power to say process and rules are unfair or contrary to the charter or x’s jurisdiction

Citizenshipo Right of the state to define citizen

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

o Dual citizenship? Should this exist? wide debate.←← Aboriginal Law

First Nations, first borders – what are the borders, who controls them? They are not recognized by some aboriginal peoples

A the centre of membership question Watt v. Canada, (1998) 169 D.L.R. (4th) 336 (FCA)

o US citizen with a criminal record – asserted right to cross the border based on his aboriginal connection. Had crossed back and forth frequently in the valley

o Not registered under the Indian Act; connection to the arrow lake band which had been found to be extinguished

o Court of appeal recognized the possibility of a right, apart from the Act, which must be in compliance with the Charter

←← Social and Political Context

Globalization National identity

o 1/5 in 2006 were foreign born Role of the executive in immigration

o Operations Manuals, www.cic.gc.ca Immigration as a security issue

o 3(1)(h),(i); 3(2)(h)←C. Dauvergne article (See 2)

Relationship between sovereignty, migration and the rule of law; Executive crack down v. Human rights

Borders = accepted by liberals (only, open or closed?); people remain nationalized; sovereignty/membership remains a precursor to rights/justice

Control over movement of people has become the last bastion of sovereignty – loss of control has lead to a variety of ‘crackdown’ measureso Fear of large scale migration; Moral panic – economic and security considerations, us

v. them. Refugee Law & Non-refoulement stands as a beacon as states continue to shy away from

rights, incl. those of refugeeso Threat – though of minor proportions; Convention lack power to upset migration laws +

nations backing away w/o consequences.o Pure ‘illegals’ constraint – makes people think of a violation; welfare states benefits to

asylum seekers - Crackdown as a strong assertion of sovereign control.o [US-Them divide, have-nots hoping to gain], bogus refugees term ~ Refugees lumped in,

but more sympathy Strong deference of judiciary to executive + scant impact of the Charter. Selection as reflecting a Nation’s values: of the best and the brightest, family reunion,

cultural preferences or humanitarian preferences.o More available for those with more, less for those with less. Inequalities , exclusions are

underscored.o Premised on a nationalized view of economies and a dated understanding of migration

categories (Brain drain, bettering economy from a national stand point, rather than individual).

IN human rights have made few inroads, now Rule of Law may be emerging as a counter to the executive free reign (?)o need to define self in sovereignty as a great barrier o procedural fairness etc, give scope to get outside the executive and the state. Gives a

place to exert a claim for fairness to have case heard. [article may be grasping at the idea of procedural hope, neglectful of substantive

importance] Cosmopolitan sovereignty/democratic law?

o ‘law of humanity’ overtaking the q’s of the rule of law (refugee matters as separate from migration matters?) Human rights are still dependant to the venue in which they lay claim

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

Capacity to ensure stability and predictability and its need to be adaptive and responsive

*Backlash of human rights – as they blossom in a country, become more restrictive for those who can access these.

←← Class Three← THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES – LIBERAL DEBATES AND CHALLENGES

Seminar Type Discussion of Readings & Fact Scenerio←← Trebilcock Essay:

Human capital – he says this has to do with economics, not morality or anything. Brain drain – when a country loses it’s most educated workers. T. says that it’s made up when the workers send money back home in the form of

remittances. BUT: Remittances form a dependent economy – the number one form of income in the

Philippines is Remittances. T. proposes we get rid of the model we have and make one of private sponsorship – people

get sponsored so that they don’t just come and drain the social services. Problems:

o If we make the decision about immigration on a cost-benefit analysis, what if that changes? Do we stop at that point?

o Aren’t we talking about people here? Cost-benefit analyses just don’t seem right. o Also, on p. 51 talks about how we make money off them – he really looks at them as

lesser people it seems. o Where does morality and stuff come in on this analysis? Nowhere.

Banasfesh is open to this kind of argument, but guest speaker hates it. ←← Carens

Promotes the case for open borders based on individual morality and liberalism. He takes 3 different liberal angles and gets there:

Robert Nozick : property theory – individuals choice to bring people in or reject them. Utilitarian argument : Cost/benefit based on the whole world, not just citizens - he says if we

look at cost benefit analyses like above, you have to look at everyone’s, not just those in the insider country. Based on this, it is moral to have open borders.

Rawls : Justice is fairness – we should choose our system based on a ‘veil of ignorance’ – what would you want out of this just society if you didn’t know anything about your race, class, gender, etc. how would you choose a society? o He says it would be an equal society, because we wouldn’t know where we’d end up.o Equality and inequality would only happen where it is for greater benefito Rawls finds a closed border would prevail (citizen perspectives).

Carens takes this and says that under a veil of ignorance you would choose a system of open borders (tied into equality and Rawls reasoning, veil as analyzed from a global perspective, not citizen).

←← Walter (won’t read next class)

Takes a communitarian perspective, as a value (still liberal) P. 61/62/79/96 Argues that closed borders in a community are necessary to maintain distinct character; and

justice. Membership in community defines who we are and the character of that community – it is the

right of a sovereign to self-determination. o Liberalism requires *self determination. o Membership is the primary good bestowed by a liberal nation (before q’s of justice)

Exception made for situations: o Mutual aid and Dire need (created a duty on us)o Where won’t dilute everything

Otherwise, closed borders are quite moral.←← Galloway

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Disagrees with Walzer [Walter differs as communitarian], and counters Carens from another angle – uses Rawls against him.

Rawls – argued for closed borders under a veil Didn’t imagine veil properly Open borders restrict individual’s own autonomy – people wouldn’t pick the scenerio that

restricts their autonomy (obligation to help others would restrict their autonomy) He says though that if we do decide to open our borders, it must be done so in a non-

discriminatory way. He uses a human dignity model much like the current s. 15 jurisprudence on the subject.

Immigration should at least in part be needs based←← Catherine Dauvergne

Immigration just doesn’t work in liberalismo It doesn’t lye in the moral realm of liberalism, but in amoral groundo Not wrong, or immoral, but can’t attach moralityo Can not be critiqued by an accepted notion of good, and therefore any liberal

conceptions of justice Rather – it’s based on Humanitarianism

o Derived from the little exceptions in Immigration lawso Open concept = no consensus.

Moral vs. Humanitarian argument. The moral claim is from liberalism and there is a moral imperative, whereas the humanitarian claim is from compassion. They are quite different.

We have to stop talking about immigration from this liberal framework, as it often doesn’t work.

The truth is, it’s not moral, it’s about politics. ←← CLASS EXERCISE:

Walzer: He would disagree with proposal 1 – he’s big on kinship and family.

Galloway: He thinks there should be a needs-based exemption, so the blanket rejection would

be wrong. Also, you can’t do it in a discriminatory way. If there’s a discriminatory effect, then he wouldn’t like it.

←← Class Four – Side of the People← OVERVIEW OF THE PROCESS & STATUS OF THE PLAYERS ← Immigrants And Refugees←← IRPA

Framework legislation – sets out general terms, rules governing admission, terms of residence, removal and status of non-citizenso s.3 “Objectives and Application”

S.2(2) “Act” includes Regulations - Most content now left to the Regs (passed by cabinet) Supplementing policy and program manuals (Citizenship and Immigration)

o Not law, non-binding, but effectively guide government official Im interpretation and application of the above.

Other source for interpretation – International law, Hansard (House of Commons eg.), Regulatory assessment…

←← Sections← [Not closed sections, but well organized]← ss 1-10 preliminary material

a few definitions, objectives, federal-provincial agreements← Part 1, ss 11-95 – Coming to Canada

pre-entry, examination, entering and remaining, acquiring status, inadmissibility, loss of status and removal, detention and release, rights of appeal, judicial review, protection of information, general provisions

← Part 2, ss 95-116 – Refugee Protection← Part 3, ss 117-150 – Enforcement, Keeping people out

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arrest, criminal consequences← Part 4, ss 151-186 – Immigration and Refugee Board← Part 5, ss 187-275 - Transitional and Consequential

Where IRPA replaced the former Act in 2002←← Contextual interpretation “The words are to be read in their entire context and in their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme fo the Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament”

- Driedger, cited by SCC in Medovarski←← How did they get where they are today? (Where are they?)← Re: IRPA

IRPA, ss. 2, 12, 19-22, 27, 46-47 IRP Regs, ss. 70-72, 179 The BIG exceptions: IRPA ss. 24 and 25

← 1. Citizens (& Indians under the Indian Act) Special Rights under the Charter – S 6(1) of Charter

o mobility rights – unconditional right to enter and leave Citizenship is defined under the Citizenship Act

o Citizenship is unconditionalo Though the Act is subject to change from time to time as any other legislation.o Generally can’t take away citizenship that is already vested, but can change future

acquisition. S. 19 of IRPA– right to enter and remain

o Builds off chartero No discretion of border officers – May be subject to Aboriginal rights to enter an remain

(see: Mr Watt’s, case still outstanding) Also have other special rights, mostly to do with sponsoring

>Must apply to visa office, and fit into one of 12 classes

← 2. Permanent Residents S. 21 How to become a PR:

o Apply for permission to acquire that status in conformity with regs Province may be granted power to select PR

o Indicate: Refugee, family or economic class (icl. Immediate fam)o must meet criteria; and must not be inadmissible (S. 12 classes note kinds of immigrants

we’re looking for) S. 20 Must apply outside of Canada (at office in country you’re residing), and requirements

are met once you are in Canada (PR Visa)o Temporary resident equivalent is s. 24

S. 28 Residency requiremento No criminal/security reasons, 730 days/5yrs present in countryo IRB Appeal allowed (with criminality exceptions)o Regardless of physical time spent in Canada – H&C considerations (including that of the

child), s. 25 The minister shall consider requests of a person who may be otherwise inadmissible

(pressure valve on specific classes) S. 27 Permanent resident status is conditional S. 46 PR status can be lost under IRPA

o Acquiring citizenshipo Loss upon deportationo Failure to comply with Residency requirementso Automatic loss if refugee status is vacated

S. 19 Right to Enter and remain in Canada o PR Card is presumptive evidence of permanent resident statuso How far can you go at the port of entry here?

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Right to move between the provinces (foreign workers program create different challenges from province to province)

Other rights: work and study in Canada, sponsor immigration of family members, income assistance, health care, after 3 years residence can become citizens

←← Loss of permanent residence status← Romans v. Canada (2001)

Schizophrenic – H&C grounds for him to stay?o Had criminality restrictionso Appealed loss to board – unfortunate, but on balance appropriate for him to loose

permanent resident statuso Court took a hands off approach – Did the board do their analysis (in accordance with

PFJ)? -- Yes.← Canepa v. Canada (1997)

Complaint to UN Human Rights Committee under International Lawo Was a very long-tem resident of Canada – thought he was a Canadian citizen, found out

he wasn’t when contacted by authorityo Came to Canada with whole family when he was 5o Significant criminal record – removal order against himo Argued right to remain in his own country 12(4), arbitrarily interference w/ fam 17, 23 ~

Covenant of Civil and Political Rightso Cruel and inhumane/degrading punishment

Majority o Create a hierarchy of familyo Not arbitrary deprivation because done in accordance with Canadian law (refers to

process – done in a fair way)o Public interest and safety

and Minority o Expanded the definition of citizenship, and said Canada is where he belongs – de facto

citizenship claimo “own country” must be determined on a case by case basis

← 3. Foreign Nationals Not a Canadian citizen, PR, incl. stateless persons

← Temporary residents - Students, workers, visitors Temporary residents have right to enter and remain for the period for (only) which their

temporary stay is authorized (ss. 20, 22, 47)o Visitor Class, worker class, student class (will also require work/stuffy permit)o Must apply for a visa at the port of entry

Reg. 190 Exemptions: US etc., granted temporary status at port of entry Shall be granted so long as person satisfies officer they will leave at the end of the

period, and not be inadmissible s.24(3) allows officer to issue visa where inadmissible, but justifiable

o Very difficult to modify genuine-ness (moral panic – ie. Regarding bogus educational institutions)

o Canada doesn’t really control exit of these individuals (may be a more operational/practical problem)

May be entitled to become a PR (reside here for 3-5 yrs) or may apply for Refugee status Temporary resident status is conditional and may be lost (s. 47)

o Expiry – may apply to renew before this date to reinstate status in time (regulations, s. 180)

o If found not to be in compliance with another part of the act (interesting difference in how 46/47 are worded) Determination by officer for non-compliance > Generally distinction w/o a difference;

order made immediately with no time lag. Ie. These have less rights than permanent residents

←← Protected Persons, s. 95

Convention refugee – s. 96

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o Person who, by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion.. has had to flee their country, and given protection by Canada

Person in need of protections – s. 97o Person who cannot return to their country because of a danger of torture, a risk of

cruel/unusual treatment or punishment, or a risk to their life – thus given protection by Gov of Canada (limits)

S. 98 – Exceptions - Article 1 E & F Decided by - special immigration board, or immigration parole officer, or issued special visa,

and upon entry automatically becomes a refugee/protected person S. 19 No right to enter Canada S. 21(2) Usually are eligible to acquire PR status (apply per Reg. 175) May otherwise be inadmissible

o Can be claimed inadmissible and still become a resident (minor criminality, and medical inadmissibility, regarding family members, misrepresentation)

o W/o right – people may lie to obtain entry and escape their conditions. This may thus be forgiven

Ss. 108-109 can lose protected person status (vacate status) S 115** - Cannot be expelled from Canada to a place of risk (non-refoulement)

o Remain, but not Enter (Mobility) Other Rights (So long as a removal order can’t be enforced): have a right to obtain work,

study permits (at foreign national tuition rates), health care, income assistance.o Enforced v. enforceable

←← Undocumented Migrants

Basically no rights (to work, study etc.)o Efficiency and profit makes these people economically attractive

20,000 – 200 000 people Different for persons who were originally documented

← Class 5 – The Authority side← PROCESS & SUPPORTING PLAYERS

Governmentalo Department of Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC)o Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA)o Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB)o Federal Court and Federal Court of Appeal (FC and FCA)o Department of Justice (DOJ)

Mandate Mission Values Department of Justice Act

Non-Governmentalo Immigration Lawyers and Consultantso Organizations with an opinion (eg. Canadian Bar Association, Canadian Council for

Refugees, Fraser Institute)o United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

←← Parliamentary Committee / Governor In Council

Standing Committee of the House on Citizenship and Immigration GIC makes IRP Regulations Certain IRP Regulation are subject to Parliamentary input (IRA, s. 5) Canadian Council for Refugees v. M.C.I., 2008 FCA 229

o What Is the role of the Court here?o Regs aren’t unconstitutional, but on another set of facts, may be applied in an

unconstitutional manner (open door)←← Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC)

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Minister of Citizenship, immigration and multiculturalism (Jason Kenney) + now, minister of public safetyo P. 32 – list of Title for those responsible for immigration

Agency on the government side in cases we read “…v. Canada (M.C.I.)” Central bureaucratic organization in charge of bringing people to Canada, and granting them

status once here o Applications for all categories of permanent and temporary residents (in-Canada and

overseas) – processes visas/docso Citizenship applications and actions to revoke citizenshipo Preliminary screening for asylum seekers in Canada – decides who to refer to IRB to

apply for refugee protectiono Administers resettlement prgs (refugees outside Canada)

CIC policy-makers create the policy (www.cic.gc.ca “Policy and programs Manuals”). Includes policy applied by CIC and CBSA

Planned spending in 2008-2009: $1,318,600,000 (1.3 Bil)←

Immigration Officers and Minister’s Delegateso S.6 – Minister delegates power to those responsible for decision makingo Responsible for first-level decisions on visas and application to immigrate

Wide level of discretion in the interpretation and application of IRPA Reasons informing decisions not always revealed. Values, policies and ideologies of

the particular decision maker as infusing the exercise of discretion = worrisome.o Engage in “facilitation” side of immigrationo Enforcement (removal) was taken from CIC in 2002, and granted to the Canada Border

Services Agency (CBSA)←← Canada Border Service Agency (CBSA)

S. 4 CBSA is the central bureaucratic organization in charge of enforcement (keeping inadmissible persons out of Canada)o *Port of entry (border) decisions, security screening of immigration applicants (detains

security risks/danger to public), removal of people without status, Refers refugee claims to the IRB, CBSA officers appear on behalf of the Minister in IRB hearings

o Must be satisfied individual has visa – and is still admissible under the criteria of IRPA S.6 Immigration officer and Ministers’ Delegates make decisions

o Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada (Peter Van Loan)o Agency on the government side in cases “…v. Canada (M.P.S.E.P)

Took over enforcement aspects of IRPA from Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC)o Formed by Order in Council in Dec 03 (time from Sept 11, 01)

←← Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) , p. 37 Chart

Refugee Protection Division Immigration Division Immigration Appeal Division

o Hears appeals on certain immigration matters Refugee Appeal Division (not in place)

-- Independent tribunal, but reports via Minister of CIC Government council appointee Largest Canadian federal tribunal Planned spending 133 million, almost 81 million on refugee determination

- Refugee Protection Division Decides on refugee claims made by people in Canada

o Convention refugees, or persons in need of protectiono Non-adverarial

Hears refugee protection claims, applications for vacation of refugee protection, and applications for cessation of refugee protection (country is no longer a place of risk)

ie. refugees have rights, such as to apply for permanent residency ←

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- Immigration division Conducts admissibility hearings/review to determine if people (FN or PR) may enter or remain

in Canada; where they are alleged to be inadmissible or in contravention of the Acto P.45 Supp – X remain in Canada

Conducts detention reviews for foreign nationals or permanent residents who are detained (jailed) for immigration reasons.o Occurs frequently; minister must satisfy the board members of valid reasons for

detention (like a board hearing)o Reasonable ground to believe: Unlikely to appear for an examination, hearing or removal

(flight risk); danger to the public; inadmissible for security reasons or human rights violation; FN has not established identity

o 48 hrs, 7 days, every 30 days (or early review with new facts Always adversarial (Person v. Minister)

←← - Immigration Appeal Division (Most judicial, of the quasi-judicial)~

Hear and decide appeals on certain immigration matters:o For removal orders, made against PR, protected persons, and FN who have PR visas (w/i

30 days; issue stay)o Sponsorship applications for family members refused by CICo Residency obligations found by CIC officer not to be fulfilled by PR (w/i 60 days)o Appeals by the Minister (CBSA) from decisions of the Immigration Division at

admissibility hearings Ability to overturn if wrong in fact, wrong in law or H&C considerations No appeal if: serious criminality (2+ yrs prison), involvement in organized crime, security

grounds, violation of HR, (& for sponsors – misrep) CIC is bound by decision, but can still refuse application on other grounds

← - Refugee Appeal Division (not in place).. failed when last government fell←← Removal Orders:

Departure ordero Must leave Canada, and simply meet normal criteria to come backo Leave w/i 30 days, or becomes excl. ordero Refugee claimant is issued a conditional DO, effective if refugee claim is abandoned, or

refugee protection is not granted Exclusion Order

o Must leave and cannot return for one yr, unless have written permissiono Misrep = 2 years

Deportation order o You will be removed from Canada, and can’t come back to Canada w/o written

permissionso Issued for inadmissibility (security threat/serious IRPA violation)

← Federal Court and Federal Court of Appeal (FC and FCA) ← Lastly can always end with appeal here

Judicial review of proceedingso No contract, limited tort, mostly judicial review o Non-compliance with Constitution

S7 Charter of Rights Fed/Prov agreements in immigration, Fed paramouncy

o Procedural fairness & Substantive review -- jurisdiction, error of law (when and why a court should defer)

Ss. 72-75o Jurisdiction over immigration matters – federal court o Judicial review proceedings (Federal Courts Act s. 18.1(4))o Also very limited discretion in Provincial Supreme Courts – based on residual charter

powers and ability to grant remedies, and wrongful detainmento Only ON exercises this ability

Leave requirement

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o Don’t get to court as a right – Must applyo Can only be granted if you have exhausted all your other appealso No reasons given – one line decisiono Hear conflicting answer by judges (reads once, and makes a decision if she can; then

once more .. if up in the air will grant leave; Makes decision in 15 minutes and sticks to it)

o Purely paper process – affidavit and argument files – department files in response. Judge decides.

Certified question required procedure to go to the FCAo Question must be certified (“as of general importance”) for appeal o End of the line

Hope of “The Law” in immigration o “The record”, or file of all information is given to the individualo Question is not – was the right decision made? – but, was it made properly?o All procedural – not focused substance of outcome; remedies all send matter back to be

redone in a manner consistent with the lawo Catherine “The law as immigration’s once great hope”o Statutory authority to make decision - limited by statue (more administrative decisions,

stuck with what parliament has said) Constitutional difference from courts with inherent jurisdiction; can grant remedies

and give results (do justice) P. 169 – List of (limited) Federal court powers

Further appeal by leave to the Supreme Court of Canadao An even more narrow right to get leave for the SCC

←← Dilemma of Judicial Review

Job as a judge and his experiences Refugee claim dismissed – mother safe, not children (genital mutilation)

o Claims are about forward looking risko Mother is not at risk anymore – what does judge do with what the law sayso Judge’s approach to his job – must follow the rules, his opinion is irrelevant – but can

maybe find a way to do what is righto Reasonable to send her back? Finds a way to fit it within the rules, and make it work.

Reasonableness standard – decided by the federal judgeo Must meet the test; within a range of possible reasonable outcomes, given the facts and

the lawso Different RPD members could make completely different decisions, based on their

interpretation of the rangeo Not about the judge’s ethical opinions.

←← Class 6← JUDICIAL REVIEW – ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW(Process and Players Continued)←← Dunsmuir 2008 SCC - Nature/standard/process/substance of JR

Latest word on judicial review, and the extent of judicial review.o We’re dependent on this case for JR and Jurisdiction of courts in the context of

immigration law (new one isn’t decided yet).o Before IRPA and CML applied standard of correctness, so case creates door to

deference (incl. for IRB and officers)o Crown lawyer was dismissed; grievance went through a tribunal, and was appealed to

see what the Court can do in judicial review What are they actually allowed to look at? Jurisdiction to determine cause? How do we treat

their findings (fact)? o [27-28]: The Rule of Law is the foundation of JR.

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o Fed Court Act (+IRPA) sets out grounds on which judicial review can be granted – erred in law, beyond jurisdiction, failed to observe a principle of natural justice, erred in fact perversely or capriciously, acted by fraud/perjury, any way contrary to law - catch-all provision.

o Judicial Review isn’t an appeal; or a new hearingo The remedies are set out in 18.1(3) Federal Court Act

If the tribunal did something unlawful, Crt can quash the decision OR can order a tribunal to do anything it unlawfully failed to do/unreasonably delayed to doing

Result may still end up the same. Can limit scope of power – but not discretion granted via statue to decision make

o Issue a removal order – Court can stay/prohibit this order while one challenges lawfulness of Risk analysis

Before this case, there were 3 Standards of Review Analysis: o Was tribunal decision correct? o Was it reasonable?o Was decision patently unreasonable?

[Results focused] [47] Reasonableness is a deferential standard – Certain Qs lend themselves to a range

of possible outcomes that are defensible in fact and law… so there can be multiple correct decisions. JR is concerned with whether it falls within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible. o Used for immigration – [55] A privative clause in statute - direction from Parliament or a

legislature indicating the need for deference + discrete and special administrative regime w/ special expertise

o Officers/board have experience/knowledge gained from day to day working of nuances and particularities, thus may have better ability to weight and balance appropriate factors

o [53] Where a Q of fact (or law/fact intertwined), discretion or policy, deference will usually automatically apply [huge spectrum]

[57] No standard of review analysis necessary if it’s already been done by another judge of the same level.

[58] Correctness standard of review for Constitutional questions [59] Standard of correctness where ultra vires jurisdiction

o Robust view of Jurisdiction for administrative bodies; o Can only act w/in the rules of the act

[66] A Q of General Law (so an error, or fuzzy) is central to court’s jurisdiction and outside the area of expertise of admin bodyo Nature of the Q of law: Q that is of “central importance to the legal system and

outside the specialized area of expertise” of the administrative decision maker will always attract a correctness standard. Q of law that does not rise to this level may be compatible with a reasonableness standard where the two above factors so indicate.

Decision (more than on fact) – may be less deference? (lower spectrum)

Jurisdiction Error Officers and decision makers only make decisions delegated to them via the act If ethnicity not list – decision on such would be outside jurisdiction “Independence” – Not process, can’t fetter discretion

←← M.C.I. v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12

Long-awaited decision of the SCC on standard of review of tribunal’s finding of fact in immigration context

Interplay of Dunsmuir and s.18.1 of the Federal Courts Act (“FCA”) FCA, s.18.1 sets out grounds for review and not standard of review – Dunsmuir analysis still

applies Reinforces deferential approach to judicial review – standard of review is reasonableness

←← [Substantive Review of Discretionary Decisions]← Resulted in s.25 rewording – incl. CRC← Baker v. MCI 1999 SCC – for decisions of officers (Pre-Dunsmuir)

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Judicial review from an immigration officer decision not granting Baker a s.25 H&C exception (didn’t qualify otherwise and couldn’t stay); unsuccessful at Fed Court, appealed reasonableness of decision - procedural and substantive review

Granting H&C exception is a discretionary decision on exceptional circumstances – Role of child’s interest? o Discretion must be exercised acc. w/ boundaries imposed in the statute, principles of the

rule of law, admin law, fundamental values of Canadian society, and the Chartero Weighed factors – decided on a reasonableness standard

P. 180 – Officer notes provided (reasonable apprehension of bias) Judge looked to many different sources framing of decision:

o IN obligations (Controversial - guidelines, soft law)o Objective of IRPA – family unityo CRC guidelines on best interests of the child – 100 page doc to those making these

decisions (now s. 25 explicitly mentions) “Unreasonable exercise of discretion not to consider” Not determinative, but an important factor.

Judges’ own discretion – fettering?o Expand with outside policyo Expectation of what one can/would rely on when officer is making decision – eg. best

interest of childo (Reduced JR to process, not substance)

*Baker after D? (how would this have played out?)o “Range of Reasonableness,” - not w/io Don’t look at best interest of the child?

← Hawthorne Re-emphasized child consideration as important but not determinative (possibility of being

outweighed by other factors)←← Suresh v. MCI 2002 SCC (also pre-Dunsmuir)

Found to be a convention refugee, so can’t be removed from Canada (+well founded fear of torture). This is subject to exceptions, such as for danger to the public. Minister decided he was ‘dangerous’; appealed.

How deferential is the court supposed to be to the minister’s decision? P. 191 Baker didn’t imply court could reweigh the evidence (maybe not true..), but draws on an

established line of cases concerning failure of ministerial delegates to consider and weigh implied limitations and/or patently relevant factors

When a decision has political/security elements, extra deference should be given to decision Patent unreasonableness or unreasonableo Due to competing interests and IN obligationso Should not disturb a decision based on ‘broad discretion’ unless the tribunal has made

some error in principle or exercised in a capricious or vexatious manner.←← [Procedural Fairness] p.207/8

Federal Courts Act allows for judicial relief where decision maker has failed to observe a principle of natural justice or procedural fairness

Reasonable apprehension of bias ~ cynical and jaded DPF - Individual affected should have the opportunity to present heir case fully and fairly, and

have decisions affecting their rights, interests or privileges made using a fair, impartial, and open process, appropriate to the statutory, institutional, and social context of the decision

Non-exhaustive factors determining Duty of fairness (as a principle of fundamental justice):

[CL principles of fairness and natural justice (correctness)]1. Nature of decision made and procedure followed in making it ~ closeness of the administrative process to the judicial process (Huge in Baker; Oral interview required? Maybe not..)2. The role of the particular decision within the statutory scheme (statute as helping determine duty – eg. high fairness threshold where no possibility of appeal)

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3. The importance of the decision to the individual affected (Suresh – would be deported to Torture – obligation on refugee to show prima facie case may be risk – requires greater procedural protection)4. Legitimate expectations of the person (ie. Policy); where undertakings were made concerning the procedure to be followed (not substantive).5. The choice of the procedure made by the agency itself (x nec require full oral hearing or judicial process_

All the factors work together, aren’t exclusive, and may not all be engaged in every case. o [Participatory right] Has individual been given adequate notice of the proceedings/issue

to be decided/concerns of decision maker; Granted adequate disclosure of material o Sufficient opportunity to present their case, respond to allegations against them,

represented by counsel, given interpreter (Suresh)o Is the person who hears the case, the one who decides it?o Delay prejudicing the individual?

Other alleged procedural shortcomings in Baker o Provision of adequate reasons – This has become increasingly prevalent in recent years.

It’s seen as very important for someone to be given reasons for their decision. They aren’t necessarily required but this is extremely rare.

o Foster transparency and more fair/better decision makingo Baker ended up being based on some immigration officer’s notes about the hearing

(notes can qualify as reasons). Ahani - Government balances his risk v. security of Canadians, gave opportunity to respond –

deported.

←← Class 7**Baker, Singh and Chiarelli – 3 of the most important cases←← CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW

Federal/Provincial Agreements (eg. Canada-Quebec accord)o Provincial criteria, but federal government has Paramouncyo S.8/9 IRPA Fed/Prov agreements in immigration

Charter of Rights (legislation as contrary)o S.7 Right to life, liberty, and security of the person + right not to be deprived thereof

except in accordance with the principles of FJo Constrain both procedural and substantive decision making

*Strike portions of the immigration act as being unconstitutional←← Singh v. MEI - Was no right to an oral hearing for refugee claims

S 7 -- That risk of deprivation for security of the person, with risk for well-founded fear of prosecution, engages section 7o “Security” - Freedom from the threat of physical punishment or sufferingo Right to a hearing [procedure], not the right itself.. engages s.7o Can deprive, provided its done in accordance with principles of FJo Applies to every human being physically present in Canada

Lack of access to an oral hearing was not in accordance w/ principles of FJo Wording “while lawfully in Canada” – no Convention refugee will be, in one sense,

lawfully in Canada. Avoided by issuing minister’s permit. Discretion of minister must be done fairly and in accordance with proper principles

o Refugees didn’t not have a fair opportunity to present their claims or know the case they had to meet, x make an effective challenge

“Immigration is a privilege, and not a right” – “ I do not think this kind of analysis is acceptable in relation to the Charter”

S.1 – s.7 implicitly recognizes the balance of administrative convenience does not override the need to adhere to these principles

NO positive right … didn’t go very far in creating rights for refuges (but opened the door?) Prompted creation of IRB

←← --Still restrictions on rights of appeal.. (compare reasoning in cases)

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← Chiarelli v. Canada (MEI) S. 7 – s. 7 violation: In camera process before SIRC, and deportation of a long-term PR w/o

considering all circumstances of his case (process of issuing security certificate) Suspect of involvement in organized crime – issued certificate automatically dismissing his

appealo Crime was a Canadian problem, not a deportation oneo Family was here – right to make a H&C appeal was uncst.o Force return to Italy would deprive him of liberty, and to some extent security of the

person Sopinka p. 163: Not going to speak of this – “In determining scope of principles of FJ as they

apply here, must look to principles and policies underlying immigration law” – The most fundamental principle of immigration law that non-citizens do not have an unqualified right to enter or remain in the country. At CL, an alien has no right to enter or remain in the country o Court wouldn’t even engage S 7, here sidesteppedo He violated the provisions of his temporary residency.

Thus parliament has the right to adopt an immigration policy and to enact legislation prescribing the condition under which non-citizens will be permitted to enter.o Otherwise, could become a haven for criminal and others whom we legitimately do not

wish to have among us. Also referred to s 6 – mobility right is constrained to citizens (distinction made here b/w non-

residents)← >Reconcilable??? Either side…

Singh o Security/refugee - Different idea around refugee claimants?o s.7 for every human being present in Canadao [didn’t provide for] a fair opportunity to meet case against oneself (x + action for) – s.7 x

overarching balance of admin convenienceo . ‘Immigration not a right’ analysis as inappropriate

Cher o TR/personal responsibility for insecurity? + liberty ~ perhaps case tried to engage ‘right’

more than process? Deportation in itself cannot implicate the liberty and security interests protected by

s.7 of the Charter (Liberty, as informed by s. 6, is not a protected right..)o no s.7 analysis o Rather than ‘didn’t provide for’ – actively excluded the provision of (- action from) -

maybe should have been justified under s.1? Active conditions, policies and legislation (rather than omission of providing for FJ)

o Looks to ‘no right to remain’ (As part of FJ); rather than procedure, s7 – should have applied? Which applies first – Charter; or Immigration K?

Not - Charter v. Immigration regime as highest; Procedure first: Cher wasn’t looking for substantive result, should have ensured Charter rights were protected; held Immg statute above Charter. FJ informed on it’s own terms, or by immigration principles. Should have satisfied both.

Nguyeno Provision rendering certain individuals ineligible to make a refugee claim – foreigner has

absolutely no right to be recognized as a refugee… s.7 is not engaged by a declaration of ineligibility because the declaration by itself does not lead to any act that may affect like, liberty or security of the person [would not outrage Canadian standards of decency so as to offend PFJ)

o Distinguish b/w person rendered inelligible from one to be deported

Charter of Rights case decided not long after Sept 11← Suresh v. MCI, SCC

Connection to Tamel tigers of the Lamb – reasonable belief of terrorism engagement; Was fundraising (not illegal at the time).

Non-Refoulement, special risk of torture on the evidence – one exception is “danger opinion,” or inadmissible on security grounds (Terrorism)

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o Scope of terrorism? (risk for everyone everywhere – Canada is responsible to prosecute and protect)

o Fundraising - no harm directly to Canadians - how should this feed into the danger certificate process

Legislation and conduct of Minister were challengedo Facing torture - but danger certificate was issued regardlesso Legislation that permits this is contrary to S.7 and PFJ

Charter generally forbids deporting a person to face torture in the name of national security (serious possibility of this here)…o Deportation to face torture engages s. 7; PFJ – shocks the Canadian conscienceo Furthest court has gone at creating a SUBSTANTIVE RIGHT to remain in Canada – where

there is a serious possibility of torture – will not deport. …but left open the hypothetical possibility that there might be extraordinary circumstances

warranting an exception, still consistent with PFJ . o Clear – nothing wrong with Dangerous certificate per se – minister CAN carve out an

exception – not unconst in any wayo But in issuing– minister must act in a way that is Constitutionalo Court side-stepped articulation of the criteria for exception allowing deportation (does

engage S. 7/PFJ here; Balancing)… perhaps hoping or anticipating that it would never be necessary to do so.

o *Comes down to balancing, and Canadian jurisprudence suggest this will usually come down against expelling a person to face torture elsewhere

o PFJ… + procedural fairness (CL, and administration) – turns right to the Baker principles – he didn’t have proper time to know and respond to the case against him.

+ assurance – Sri Lanka will not torture! Signed international lawo BUT – insufficient, how could we rely on an assurance, when we can’t rely on their

following international law? ( Dadar! Inconsistent with this case.. or simply was one of these exception cases?)

←← Guzman v. MCI FC 2006

S 15 on equality – how do these fit with immigration? It’s about distinguishing people based on personal characteristic

o Equality – about not discriminating based on personal characteristicso Eg. medical conditions that would unduly burden Canadian society – Burden on social

welfareo Polygamy – freedom of religion with immigration? Multiple spouses

Sponsor - Recipient of social assistance for reason other than a disabilityo Discriminatorily prevents those on social assistance [not a personal characteristic] from

being able to sponsor a relative, otherwise qualified to sponsor [no enumerated ground]o Can sponsor – if undertake to provide for basic requirements of individual sponsor;

balance importance of reunification with economic factors; support self before support others [burden on taxpayers otherwise] – assumption that those on welfare can’t support others is an informed one [not discriminatory]

o S. 25 valve – or sponsor when off welfareo Where complete bar (from sponsorship) would operate unfairly in particular

circumstance – 133(1)(k) allows minister’s discretion ←← & Charkaoui v. MCI

All risk of torture. All subject to security certificates under IRPA (based on alleged involvement with terrorism), some foreign nationals, some permanent residents, certain refugee status.o PR may be detained, + review, FN must be detained, no review until 120 days after

Federal court holds certificate as reasonable; reasonable = removal order, may be immediately enforced (even to torture)

S 7 was engaged also, making it a Charter challengeo because liberty was deprived (automatic detention upon issuing a security certificate) +

risk of torture

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o Crown – initially said S7 isn’t engaged (deportation itself doesn’t engage S7, Medagarzski)

o BUT deportation + (eg. detention, to torture) engages S 7, not just in and of itself – FPJ not to lose liberty w/o due process

o PFJ -Impartial and independent judge + case to meet Admin, Procedural fairness Argument - Can issue certificate of inadmissibility – but process

for issuing is unfairo Minister and judge rely on secret information o Lack of chance to respond! (s. 15 many Canadian citizens subject to suspicion, but not

deportation orders –unsuccessful)o judicial review, but this judge has access to secret evidence, as does crown, no appeal

(no independent agent to better protect person’s interests - need to have someone speak to the evidence against – or else deference is afforded)

o but individual doesn’t need to know cases against us ~ need safeguards/substitutes s. 9 guarantee against arbitrary detention; the s. 10(c) guarantee of a prompt review of

detention ~ violatedo Some continuing detention found to be arbitraryo Detention – can be okay, so long as there are regular reviews, consistent with S 7 of the

Charter including reasons for detention, length of detention, reasons for delay in deportation,

anticipated future length of detention, availability of alternatives to detention,←← S7? “It follows that while administrative constraints associated with the context of national security may inform the analysis on whether a particular process is fundamentally unfair, security concerns cannot be used to excuse procedures that do not conform to fundamental justice at the s. 7 stage of the analysis. If the context makes it impossible to adhere to the principles of fundamental justice in their usual form, adequate substitutes may be found. But the principles must be respected to pass the hurdle of s. 7. That is the bottom line”←← INTENATIONAL REVIEW←← International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 216

+ Optional Protocol 218← Convention Against Torture and other Cruel… 218← American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man 221← UNCAT Conclusions and Recommendations 226←← International Intersections

“Domesticized” in legislationo S. 96 of Irpa imports 1951 Convention refugee def’n

CML presumption that Gov doesn’t intend to act in breach of Canada’s IN obligationso Baker BIOC

International presenceo UNHCR officers in Canada

International Review, 2 types:o Individual Complaints

Canada is concerned with international image Final options after Canadian appeals are exhausted Canadian courts are not bound by views (Ahani, Dadar)

o Government reporting←← Individual Complaints← Dauvergne: Humanitarian Identity and Nation

Humanitarian migration laws result from the “need to define and understand the nation as compassionate and caring, as well as perhaps identical need to be perceived in this light.”

… Canadian law has a more generous face.. humanitarian.. due these intrinsic needs. “Humanitarianism is closer to the heart of the Canadian rhetoric about migration than it is in

Australia, closer to the tradition Canadian lawmakers seek to construct, closer to the mythology that Canadians, as individuals, are willing to honour and reify.”

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← Dadar: UNCAT (Committee Against Torture) Fled to Canada after being imprisoned and tortured as a political opponent of the Iranian

regime, then after serving 8 years in prison for severe aggravated assault, ordered deported. Communication to UNCAT alleging that Dadar would be subject of torture/execution if

deported to Iran UNCAT concluded “substantial grounds exist for believing this risk” CANADA – “while we takes its international rights obligations very seriously… it is Canada’s

intention to remove Mr. Dadar to Iran.” Went to federal court to complain

o Dadar - Canada’s response to UNCAT’s decision should not be tolerated by the courtso Court “As a matter of law, UNCAT decision is not binding on Canada – As in Ahani, this

case demonstrates the proper role of executive and judiciary (not judiciaries role to second guess Canada’s decision not to adopt UNCAT’s decision; Rather it’s a matter for … public or international opinion)”

o .. Did not raise a ‘serious issue’ meriting a stay of deportation. Committees rely on social sanction, media pressures and other indirect non-binding

mechanisms for covenants and enforcement Other on Torture:

o Jaballah: Huge Deference - judge accepted as 'not patently unreasonable' the government's claim of risk posed to national security, outweighing the harm of torture to J… he ‘fits the profile,’ not ‘is’ a threat to national security (embodied in secret evidence) (BYRD for death penalty?)

o “The phenomenon of terrorism has made torture 'thinkable' to some segments of the public, the state and even the judiciary, and the government has wasted no time.. expanding the category of people whom it would rather see tortured or killed than alive on Canadian soil. Mr. Dadar is not a security threat. He is a criminal offender who served his sentence.. once an offender has served his sentence, his punishment comes to an end. While Canada certainly can and does deport criminal non-citizens, doing so in disregard of the Convention Against Torture is unprecedented.”

o 2 ways to justify handing over to torture – Not think too much about it (numb, another word of unpleasantness) ~ or non-citizens as forfeiting their humanity and human rights.

o We have a criminal justice system to deal with human beings (citizens and non-citizens) who violate our criminal law, and anti-terrorism laws for those who pose threats to national security.

←← UN Human Rights Committee

Protects International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Accession by Canada 19 May 1976 Article 1 of Optional Protocol to ICCPR permits individual communications to HR Committee

← UN Committee Against Torture Protects rights in the Convention against torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading

treatment or punishment (CAT). Art. 22 of CAT permits individual communications if state party has made declaration

recognizing competence (Canada made declaration in 1989) S 97 IRPA directly reference CAT, good job of incorporation

← Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Canada is not a party – but bound by the declaration as a member of the organization of

American states Organ of the Organization of the America States to protect the rights in the American

Convention on Human Rights and the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man← Complementary protection *Growing notion

Human rights law has extended states international protection obligation, (beyond 1951 Convention) by widening the scope of non-refoulement to those at risk of lower threshold serious harm, [harm threats; need for protection; non-refoulement]

←← Tahir Hussain Khan v. Canada

Decision by UNCAT Issue: Whether forced return of Khan to Pakistan violated Canada’s obligation under art.3 of

the CAT

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Decision: Obligation not to return Khan to Pakistan←← Government Reporting

Baker (1999) – government lawyers argued that protection against family separation in international treaties should not be understood to fall under s.7 of the Charter’s protection

Meanwhile the Canadian delegation presenting reports on CRC in 1995 - had on 3 occasions, indicated that covenant’s rights were subject to Charter protection

Baker – courts was asked in oral arguments to take note of one arm of the same fed exec saying one thing before international legal audience (while reporting on progress), and another thing before domestic legal audience (at home fighting charter challenges)

←← Exercise on Alice and Country X – Appendix 1←← Class 8 (Jan 30)TOPIC TWO: ADMITTING PEOPLE TO CANADA

TEMPORARY RESIDENTS – VISTORS, WORKERS AND STUDENTS← > Basics of substantive legal regime re: visitors, students and workers

Tourists, business visitors, temp foreign workers, foreign students, live-in caregivers, seasonal agriculture workers, and holder of TR permits

← > Theoretical debate on temporary worker programs←← IRPA s. 3(1)(g) – Temporary Residents Policy Objective← “To facilitate the entry of visitors, students and temporary workers for purposes such as trade, commerce, tourism, international understanding and cultural, educational and scientific activities” - To benefit Canada, economic growth

Mutual benefits, or at expense of TR and their home countries? Not dealing with more fundamental domestic, social and economic public policy issues Challenge of facilitating TR admission while providing both protection and opportunity for

both entrants and Canadians.←← The temporary foreign workers pouring into Canada are often exploited

Growery, economic exploitation - stemming from the dramatic rise in the use of temporary foreign workers in Canada with job market demands - quiet loosening of restrictions on foreign workers designed, union leaders say, to keep wages low and to avoid a national debate on the sensitive issue of immigration.

“economic immigrants” not cutting it – employers needing less qualified, lower-paid workers. No 6 week job search, no “labour market opinion” (LMO) on whether a worker from outside the country is really needed. + virtually no monitoring of their pay or work conditions, leaving them wide open to abuse. “Every foreign worker needs basic training in his rights and to be told that there's a place to go to if he's being abused,”

do not take issue with foreign workers coming into Canada; they just do not like the temporary aspect of their stay. “If these people are good enough to build our factories and serve us coffee, they're good enough to be full citizens,” Mr McGowan says.

Ottawa is promising to make it easier for temporary workers to become permanent residents, but this is likely to be limited to the more highly skilled. And Canada needs the low-skilled too.

← Sun Article A weakening provincial economy and a spate of layoffs - "The list was dubious at the height of the

boom, but it's a complete fantasy now." AFL is probing complaints Canadian citizens are being laid off from Alberta companies that are keeping

temporary foreign workers on the payroll - something that's not allowed under federal rules. The feds allow the foreign nationals to be employed in Canada in a variety of fields that are said to be

in dire need of workers because there aren't enough Canadians to fill the jobs- long contended the feds allow in more foreign workers than Canada needs.

"If we actually need such workers, we should be bringing them into the country as immigrants not as a disposable class of guest workers. We're essentially creating an underclass of cheap and exploitable workers."

McGowan figures actually a shortage of workers in about 20% of the 170 fields. ←← Requirements

Must apply for a Visa ss. 20(1)(b), 22(1)

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o Apply for visa BEFORE coming to Canada; Unless from an exempt country [+permit to work or study] - Must meet same requirements at Port of entry

o List of countries w/ visa exemptions in IRP Reg., s.190o Also need to establish that not otherwise inadmissible

s.179 - Visa will be issued by officer if established that… Person will leave Canada at end of authorized period (6 mo default).o Refusals for insufficient ties or roots in home countryo s.22(2) Dual Intent does not preclude entry

De la Cruz v. Canada (M.C.I) 1989o Discretionary and administrative decision - Burden of proof is on applicant seeking a visa

to establish they’re admissible and will leave when visa expireso As long as visa officer has performed duty by properly considering application, Court will

not set aside decision even if the Court may have reached a different decision (deference*, unless procedural unfairness)

Yuan – breach by not allowing opportunity to respond to concerns, and failure to properly consider other relevant info

←← IRPA Reg s. 184 Conditions of temporary residence← Admissibility criteria assessed again (will leave, and not inadmissible?)

Ongoing duty to meet requirements o evidence and reason required for officer to reverse a decision

Must leave at end of authorized period (6 mo default + extension appl.) Must not work or study unless authorized by IRPA (s. 3)

o Exception for children←← Extension and Restoration of Status

Reg. 181 Can extend status if apply before status has expired and still meet conditions Reg. 183 Have implied status while extension application is pending Reg. 182 If apply within 90 days of loss of status, and still meet conditions, can restore status

(should have left – but like a grace period) Pretty easy to extend, but the more extensions the harder restoring becomes

←← Breach of conditions work/study permit

S30 – Generally results in removal from Canada (1/3 orders) Dinh v. Canada – employed off campus, order upheld

←← Study Permits (*Cheat sheet manual on over-see’s process – designed for immigration officers)

Significant source of revenue for school boards and Uni’s R. 212 Need a study permit to study R. 188 Exceptions to requirement for study permit, including if duration of course of study is

6 mo. or ( English, econ benefits; higher fees)o All Minors up to secondary school – but visa processed as foreign students in student

class, not TR in visitor class R 213 – 215 generally apply for study permit before entering Canada

o Exception for family memberso Even with 6 mo or less, if chance you want to renew

R 217 Can apply to renew study permitRequirements:o Will leave Canada at end of period authorized for stay (bona fide student)o Acceptance letter from an educational institution (w/ exceptions)o Sufficient financial resources for tuition and own expenses

←← Wang v. Canada (MCI)*

Why was Ms Wang’s study visa (permit) refused? Insuff funds Ms Wang Visa officer was unreasonable – Didn’t believe she would return home - How

established should a 19 year old be? (cultural ties, links to parents, social ties etc.) Do you agree with court’s rationale for dismissing JR? On the line… [13 & 14] Deference.

← Kim v. Canada

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Officer refused to extend Mr. Kim’s study permit and temp resident visa because hardly attended class, dragged out study time.. wasn’t satisfied rationale as here to study, as a bone fide student

Court granted this judicial review application because… no explanation as to the nature of the interview was given, no chance to meet case against him, Kim’s actions suggested otherwise – dismissed in favour of officer

←← Work Permits

S. 30 and R.196, Generally need a work permit to work in Canadao R. 186 Exceptions

eg. full-time students on campus (enrolled for 6 mo), business visitor (187), trade agreements, diplomats and family, some entertainment industry..

x specific, just know general s.204

Apply for permit if in receipt of a job offer from Canadian employer R 197-199 Usually must apply before coming to Canada

o exceptions include if already have a study permit (or post-grad, 90 days) R. 201 Can apply to renew work permit R.200 (-208) A work permit shall be issued if..

o Applicant will leave at end of stayo Is able to perform the worko Offer of employment genuine, and neutral or positive labour market effect in

Canada (HRSD usually provides labour market opinion) Visa officer can assess this themselves BUT generally require an actual labour market opinion, from human resources and

social development Canada OR demonstrate employment would create/maintain significant social, cultural, or

economic benefit/opportunity for Canadian citizens/PR Or Expedited assessment (Practical considerations)

o Exceptions to requirement for n or + labour market effect trade agreements like NAFTA, work with social or cultural benefit in Canada un-removable people with no other means of support (Refugee, H&C)

←← Policies temporary foreign worker program

07/08 initiative to facilitate foreign worker entry ~ Operational, not legislative impact [thus easier criteria for regular workers than skilled]o Expedited labour market opinion project (BC/Ab)

Instead of waiting for labour market opinion – those in key trade areas (ie. Unskilled), or services supporting these – employer could get labour market opinion over days.

Must be clear and obvious, not undermine market objectiveso More visa officers in key locations (also have private industry recruiters) eg. Manila,

Philippineso Canada/Mexico labour mobility working groupo Canada provincial immigrating agreements

Canadian Experience Class 165,198 in Canada 2007 19% Increase since 2006 (47% since 2004)

←← Theoretical Perspectives on TFW← Macklin –

Instruments for rapid recruitment to fill immediate but not necessarily temporary needs – in undesirable, devalued and low wage sectors

Insecurity – link permission to remain with service to a particular employer/occupation – creates toleration of wages and working conditions

←← Walzer – Guest Workers & Membership

> Mutual benefit and aid v. creation of divided un= societies Position on borders – should be closed

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o Humanitarian – identity and character of the community which should be preserved by closed borders

Those coming in are always servant to those in the countryo Dispensable live-in servants for the state, to perform hard ad unpleasant work - Creates

segregation o See state as a pervasive, frightening power that shapes their lives and regulated their

every move – never have a say. But don’t need citizenship like they need jobs and money

o Membership and citizenship should be open to them ~ unions/welfare, political rights/ civil liberties

o OR change the way you structure job openings, work w/i the limits of the domestic labor market to get socially nec. work done.

o *tyrants- democracy can’t operate (character of the community diluted) Political justice p. 248: That the prcess of self-determination through which a democratic

state shapes its internal life, must be open, and equally open, to all those who live within its territory, work in the local economy, and are subject to local laws o naturalization still dependent on immigrationo When the first is close = members v. strangers

Acting in the world/sovereignty/national interest – shape of the community that acts in the world

←← Ruhs – The Case for Foreign Worker Programs

New, expanded – desirable, feasible and ethical Pragmatic – realistic approach Benefits to all sides (economy labour market gaps, and for those coming in, bring experience

back) - Looking at the whole picture (sending country) While not addressing fundamental problems of poverty and econ development – benefit by

remittances of $, skills and knowledge Policies, Change incentives for employers –

o Should pay migrant workers more, prevents subsidizing inefficiencies (will look for alternative before paying this fee)

o Employers are encouraged to discourage foreign workers (rather than improve industries, they function at a lower inefficient level which citizens are willing to work in)

o Fee to generate funds for enforcement and integration assistanceo Allow for change of employers, more easily ~ freedom of movement

P.258 – Key factors*←Macklin – Foreign Domestic Workers in Canada

analysis of live-in caregivers – they’re exceptional in the legislative scheme since programs inception – healthy, no dependents, women; opportunity for citizenship after 2 years creates susceptibility to exploitation; Experience criteria/education fluctuated

Master-servant relationship, where demand has always exceeded supply being/working in the home, they’re in the private realm, rather than the public. It also seems set up for a temp worker to eventually get perm res. “The imperative of maintaining the family as a viable social, econ, and reproductive unit

means that the dual-career nuclear family will continue to depend for its survival on the foreign domestic worker even as it, by definition, excludes her”

←← On Temporary residents - you may be interested in the Federal Court’s recent decision in Voluntad v. MCI, 2008 FC 1361,

Crt dismissed judicial review of the refusal of an IRPA s.25 H&C Request was made by a foreign national who had come to Canada, worked as a live-in-

caregiver, and met class criteria to become a PR under the live-in-caregiver class, But was found to be inadmissible to Canada on the basis that treatment he required for

kidney disease would create an excessive demand on Canadian medical services.←Class 9PERMENENT RESIDENTS – ← ECONOMIC CLASSES

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Skilled Workers and Business Immigrants←← With fact scenarios - be mindful of IRP Regulations ss. 70-109,← + May find it helpful to consult the following resources:

National Occupational Classification:http://www5.hrsdc.gc.ca/NOC/English/NOC/2006/Welcome.aspx

CIC Overseas Processing Manual (especially chapters OP-6, OP-8 and OP-9):http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/manuals/op/index.asp

CIC’s self assessment test - designed to enable a prospective immigrant to determine whether he or she would meet the skilled worker selection criteria:

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/skilled/assess/index.asp←← Selection of Economic Immigrants

S.12(2) Selection of economic immigrants “on the basis of their ability to become economically established in Canada

Objectives s. 3(1):o a) Maximum social, cultural and econ benefits of immigrations - Enrich and strengthen

social and cultural fabric of Can societyo b) Support the development of a strong a prosperous Canada economy, benefits across

all regionso c) Promote integration which entails mutual obligation

4th – (J) to work in cooperation with the province - more rapid integration into society Hajariwala – purpose of the statute is to promote integratin not prevent it

←← Wroswick/Hollick (& Heibert) – Declining Earning Reasons & Remedies – Riding two cultural horses

Dubious that it’s even possible to select indvs who will be of certain econ benefit Has not been a very successful prg – poor indicators of individual’s success; Concerns that

recent economic class has not been as ‘successful’ as predecessors in terms of labour market participation and earnings

Studies showing small or no impact on native-born wages/labour Are criteria feeding into the point system the right criteria? Assuming want self-sufficient Immg’s, not drain gov resources

o If it were more successful, Canada class would feel threatened?o Net benefit to Canadians who feel we’re a more culturally diverse society and letting

more people ino Second generation success – migrate for benefit of children**o Even if selected for benefit to country - Brain drain from the South

Decrease the numbers of econ immigrants- unless changes implemented for greater success – family and refugee classes more important otherwiseo if we just got the right criteria it would work (current)o Solution – Support and resource management trainingo The problem is not the laws, it’s the framework and policy services connecting people to

economic and information prospects – ameliorate this and give more help for settlement←← How do economic migrants become permanent residents?

Ss. 11, 21 and Reg. 70-72, 74, 86 Generally apply for visa as a member of one of the econ classes (or family of) before coming

to Canada Meet class criteria and satisfy officer they are not “inadmissible” (per IRPA) Acquire status upon admission (landing)

←← Economic Classes r. Part 6 (ss.73-115)

Skilled Worker Class Business Immigrant Class (investors, entrepreneurs and self-employed) Provincial Nominees class (the QC stream is a separate category) Live-in caregiver class (Carrot to entice someone to come is the future of acquiring status)

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Canadian Experience Class (gives those with previous work or post-secondary experience opportunity to acquire permanent resident in Canada + language) ~ Seems to accord with Arron Talee

← All have to do with your experience – last two involve giving temp residents permanent status←← CIC Statistics (2007)

236,758 Total new PRs 131,248 Economic class PRs (Principle applicant and dependant family) ~ has consistently

been half Econ Class Immigrants are 55.4% of total new permanent residents Skilled worked are 74.6% of the economic class

←← Skilled Workers Class Criteria

Point system (Selection Grid ) – pass mark is designed by Minister, presently 67 pointso Applies retroactively to applications w/o an interviewo Prob - Officer may not have necessary info to properly assess the applicant’s ability to

become economically established in Canadao Lock-in date on receipt of application + all fees

S.75 2(a) 1 yr of full-time cont employment over past 10 yrs (NOC job)o when officer gets to file, or when individual applied?o Open to interpretations of officer

+ S. 87.3, motivated by lack of transferring skills for jobso Ministerial can issue Instructions: no processing application unless occupation is listed in

the Instructions, or have arranged employment, or studied/worked in Canada one yearo Instructions - Occupation falls in list (1 of 38 occupations in NOC A or B) ~ based on

labour market needs, & which are translating wello Indirect way to create a new criteria for skilled workers

Reg. 75 National Occupational Classification management/skill level A or B job experience + certain actions performed + main and essential dutieso NOC put together by Human Resources and Social Development Canada listing every job

and every qualification (education, actions performed etc.)o Just to get foot in door – need to show certain compliance with NOC - Doesn’t need to be

a certain occupation, just a skilled worker generally MUST apply from outside Canada + exceptions S. 73 Further definitions

←← Skilled Workers Selections Grid: Reg ss. 76-83 (P. 301)

Education (25)o Primary, Secondary or Pot-Secondary edu.? Total years?o Based on country of indv., not Canada ~ Is degree legitimate at homeo Qualitative and quantitative (mere showing up doesn’t count)o Could in theory meet NOC requirement with degree in discipline (descretion)

Language(24)o English/French (low/medium/high)o Oral/writing/speak/read comprehensiono Onus on applicanto Officer assessment wasn’t effective ~ most indv’s do a recognized language test, and

must meet benchmarks Experience (21) (*automatic grounds for refusal) eg. p. 306

o Years in your national occupation classification job, prev 10 yearso S.75 2(a) Min 1 year continuous full time employment or equivalent in past 10 yearso Onus on the applicant to show evidence, and determine classificationso NOC occupation other than restricted, Skill Type O (management), Level A (professional)

or B (technical, skilled trades, and paraprofessional) Age (10)

o 21-49 is best (prime working years) Arranged employment (10)

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o + if you have a job, where a gap exists in Canadian labour marketo Additional Reg requirements, permit or approved by officer/HRSDC and won’t work until

after PR status Adaptability (10)

o Previous work or study in Canada, family living/working here (or your partner)o R. 83 Partner education level or 2+ yrs studied in Canada (support helps, disadvantages

single people) = Pass Mark? Note s. 76(3)

← + Minimum funds

o $10,833o With a family 20,000o Settlement funds show you’d be able to establish yourself in Canada (low-income cutoff

used from another gov dept) Family members can immigrate as dependents of principle application, if not inadmissible Reg. 76(3) Substituted evaluation (per minister)

o opportunity for officer to substitute their own evaluation (where appears point calculation doesn’t reflect thriving ability)

o Officer must obtain concurrence from a second officer hereo Must only seek to exercise upon request from applicant, then w/ slim chance of success,

duty to inquire←← Dogra - High School Councelor

Applicant had counseling experience in India and NY, but officer said she didn’t know enough about Canada and so her experience wouldn’t translate here and wouldn’t be a benefit as a guidance counselor here.

Must know about high school kids in Canada, ‘Do you know what cocaine is?’ Attacked the process – didn’t know the case against me; q’s were inappropriate, and

irrelevant in the circumstances; Didn’t take into account my experience – should be based on my duties

Court granted judicial review, unreasonable decision, recommendation letters were fine (not fraudulent)

Requirements for this job don’t actually include knowledge of Canadian customs or culture - ‘Maybe it’s helpful to have a diverse cultural background’

Didn’t’ shut down the idea of ‘how well experience translates’ – just didn’t work here←← Sheik - Refusal of skilled worker application

Refusal of a skilled worker application based on officer’s finding of fact about education/experience points.

No error of law – but applicant said they should have assessed evidence differently (resulting in more points)o Experience should have been put in different category, and diploma should have counted

for more points Substantive issue – dismissed by courts Court and Visa assessor have no duty here, onus is on the applicant to put forward best case

to officer Grey area about education common knowledge – but no one is required to go beyond

information in front of them when assessing the applicationo But chance to give you more evidence?o Duty of applicant to do this initially (put forward best case)o Not officer’s job to tease out best case

←← Chen

SCC adopted the dissent of CA – Robertson p. 323 A ‘substituted evaluation’ case; the points system isn’t binding since the officer can

substitute a ruling to overrule a points finding (Either below or above the cutoff). o New legislation reflects Chen - s.76(3), Reg 109 allows officer to substitute factors in

102(1), based on their evaluation of the likelihood to become economically established. Seemed perfectly eligible, except thanked visa officer with $500 in card

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Application reassessed – along with discretion that points may not accurately reflect ‘successful establishment in Canada’o Did not think he would successfully establish due to the bribeo Moral turpitude

Dissent says alleged bribe couldn’t be a relevant or overriding factor to overturn his otherwise successful application. The adjudication is all about determining likelihood of economic success, not other things, like moral fitting in. o Restrict to matters relating to ability to make a livingo S. 9 and 19 specifically addressed exclusions for committing act warranting such

←← Business Immigrants, R. s.88 Defn’s

Ability to create jobs for themselves + other Canadians, contribute capital to the economy through investment, and stimulate economyo Sufficient experience of intent and ability o discretion of the officer, but in good faith (intended to bar frivolous applications)o Must fit within scope - JR of Visa officer’s interpretation

Investor: “Business experience” + 800,000 “net worth” (legally obtained) + intention to make 400,000 “investment”

Entrepreneur: “business experience” + $300,000 minimum “net worth” + able to meet conditions in Reg. 98o Reg. 88 Qualifying Canadian Business (creates jobs)o Business experience, will create jobs, min net worth

Self-employed Person: Relevant experience + intention and ability to be self-employed in Canada and to make a significant contribution to “specified economic activities”o Someone who has intention and ability to be self-employed and make a significant

contribution to specified economic activities in Canada (incl. cultural or athletic field or farming)

o Criteria for contribution = p.352

← Qualifications Selection Grid Reg. 102 – 1041. Must qualify as business immigrant (one of above 3 classed)2. Need 35 points + to pass > 5 Criteriao Ageo Educationo Languageo Experience (modified per Reg s. 103)o Adaptability (business specific Reg s. 104-105)

Reg. s. 109 Substituted evaluation Reg 103(3) – Sets ups selection criteria for self-employed

←← Rahim v. MCI

How the courts deal with business criteria Whole point of entrepreneur class – ID those who could translate skills here, includes 2 years

experience and controlling % of equity in qualifying business What does it mean to have a ‘controlling interest’ in a corporation? This is important for

whether one qualifies as an ‘investor’. The Court resolves whether it’s the person who owns the shares, or owns them ‘de facto’. o Silly but – don’t have voting shares, can’t control it here.o Control can include ability to transfer or revoke in trust

[13] – Court discussed whether they had to follow a precedent of a lower Court. They say it’s more important to look to immigration’s policies when trying to interpret provisions, rather than previous decisions etc.

←← Other Economic Classes

Moving towards these classes more than previously Quebec Skilled Worker Class

o Reflect provinces own programo Shared with national, but …

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o National tends not to go behind nomination Provincial Nominee Class

o Exception to ministerial instructionso Trust and intention of residing in that provinceo Federal can go behind provincial nomination (policy)

Sufficient reason to believe applicant does not intend to live in province that has nominated them

Investor scheme suspicion Live-in-Caregiver Class

o Unique – come as temporary residents with the possibility of attaining permanent residency

Canadian Experience Class s. 87.1…o Individuals with experience are likely to be able to integrate more easilyo Status – must have been studying under proper temporary resident status, or work

permito Language Proficiencyo Some cases education – post-graduate experience

If doesn’t have – require 2 years fulltime, over a period of 3 years Or one year of work (..?)

← Class 10 ← Economic Classes con’t. (Theory)←← ~ Relationship b/w immigration and economic growth← Schools of thought - Declining forces of immigrants←← Callacott – Looming Labour Shortage and Img?

Implied message Canada’s economy cannot grow without immigration~ unwarranted Need a larger workforce, premised on the assumption that we’ll have a larger population;

more retired; skill shortage More rational use of workforce, better training and education, more use of women and older

people continuing to work Must ensure numbers and qualifications in fact serve the nest interests of the country,

selected where reasonable prospect of employment per qualifications exists←← Tolley – Skilled Worker Criteria

Emphasize human capital attributed and flexible skills, rather than specific intended occupations (new IRPA does better)

Educationo Pre-immigration education has smaller effect than posto Challenge of recognizing foreign credentials

Language used at home has biggest effect; though language and earnings is not strictly linear relationship, but correlated

Labour market discrimination – Imm’s can’t typically find employment in the field that got them through the door

*Arranged employment – flexibility←Heibert- Poli Econ of Migration in Canada

Human capital – Do People have the skills to succeed economically?o Generally they are more educated/successful employment history than Canadianso Family - may or may not be able to integrate the same way as the

Economic restructuring – Kind of jobs Imm’s traditionally filled are disappearing, and they’re fitting into ethnic enclaves as entrepreneurs – this structure has really benefited Canadian middle class, but not immigration classo Prices driven down as Canadian’s can buy a wider variety of products for lesso Feel Good Factoro Anecdotal decline ~ more critical (reflecting economic reality and immigration policies?)

Welfare type state – Diminishing benefits; While imm’s need them more, they use them less (b/ instead are linked to employment)

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← > Immigrants bring skill into the country, but don’t have equal footing to compete with the domestic middle class; but they provide cheap labour etc. This is why the program doesn’t result in the policy goals of the system, since immigrants don’t really benefit, but resident Canadians do, which is why there tends to be positivity about immigration. ←← Eg. Beth & Hideo? (there’ll be a question like this on the exam)1st thing you’d look at – which stream will apply to them? Questions gives hint – only economic class fits.

a) They’re married, so only 1 needs to get in, but you should ask for both, so that both are evaluated, thus doubling your chances of acceptance.

Beth has the best chance of acceptance as a skilled worker. But it’s still worth asking them about disposable income, so the business category might apply.

Must assess her points total – Education – 20, assuming she was 14 years of study (it’s 12 when you grad from high

school); so ask her this! Official Language – 16 (she has Eng lang uni degree so she’s fine; if you don’t, you have to

write a certified test (best route, but very difficult) or other various means (ie from an English-speaking country). Ask her whether she speaks/understands any French.

Experience – dblchk she meets skilled worker definition, so to get processed, she must meet ministerial instructions. You must then look to NOC jobs to see whether her job fits, and whether it’s skill level A, B or management. So ask her what she’s done to make sure she’s got the requisite qualifications to satisfy these categories (ie get letters from employers, tax returns, etc); she must prove she got this job (college vocational instructor). Her 3 months as a lawyer is insufficient; it must be minimum 1 year. So she’d probably get 19 points.

Age- 10 points; she’s in the ideal age group. Adaptability (83(2)) – Hideo would get 5 education points, so that translates to 0 points for

Beth; what is the status of Beth’s sister; there’s no arranged employment. (I think prof said she’d get 5 points for the other criteria here).

← So she gets a total of 70 points, which is above the threshold. ← If she’s rejected, what about him – is he self-employed? We’re looking for athletics, farming etc. ←← Class 11 Feb 11← PERMANENT RESIDENTS - FAMILY CLASS (REUNIFICATION)

Spouses Conjugal Partners, common-law partner Children (dependents) Parents Grandparents

←← s. 3 Objectives

3(1)(d) The objectives of this Act with respect to immigration are … to see that families are reunited in Canada

3(2)(f) “ with respect to refugees are … to support the self-sufficiency and the social and economic well-being of refugees by facilitating reunification with their family members in Canada

Specific objective for families; + Canada has signed on to several international treaties protecting the sanctity of the family.

←← Family reunification under IRPA, accomplished in two ways: ← 1) Applicants for PR can include dependents in application

“accompanying family members” as distinct from “members of the family class” PR incl. economic, family or refugee Spouse/CL partner, dependent children/grandchildren

← 2) Canadian citizens/PR may sponsor PR apps made by members of defined “family classes” 18 yrs +, undertake to support for 3 – 10 yrs Spouse, CL, or child

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← S. 12 (1) A foreign national may be selected as a member of the family class on the basis of their relationship as the spouse, common-law partner, child, parent or other prescribed family member of a Canadian citizen or permanent resident.

Includes grandparents – but they are deliberately reprioritized Conjugal partner (Spouse/CL), 16 yrs + Dependent children, include adopted children or intended adoptee of sponsor under 18 yrs,

children under guardianship (orphaned minor relative) Last remaining relative

o Brothers, sisters, nephew and nieces or grandchildren who are orphans, under 18, and not married or in a CL relationship

o One relative of any age if there is no aunt, uncle or family member from the list above who could be sponsored or who is already a Canadian citizen, Indian, or permanent resident.

Non-orphaned siblings are omitted, but can be brought by a sponsored parent (only if foreign national sibling is a dependant child)

Further definitions in s.2 – conjugal partner, marriage, relative, etc. ←

← FAMILY CLASSES ← Target Levels ← #’s Admitted ← % of all PR’s

← Spouses, partners, children and others

← 49,000 – 50,000←

← 50,416←

← 21.29←

← Parents and Grandparents

← 18,000 – 19,000←

← 15,814←

← 6.68←

← Total Family Class ← 67,000 – 69,000

← 66, 230 ← 27.97 %

←← Economic Class←

← Total←

← Percent←

← PrincipalApplicants

← Dependants←

← Skilled Workers←

← 97,857←

← 74.56←

← 41,253←

← 56,604←

← Business Immigrants

← 10,179←

← 7.76←

← 2,808←

← 7,371←

← Provincial Nominees

← 17,095←

← 13.02←

← 6,329←

← 10,766←

← Live-in Caregiver ← 6,117←

← 4.66←

← 3,433←

← 2,684←

← Total Economic Class

← 131,248←

← 100 ←

← 53,823←

← 77,425←

←← Family Class, Part 7, s.116-137

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← Requirements One must be a family member (defined)

o From Reg. s. 4-5, we know that the key req is a “genuine relationship”o s. 4. For the purposes of these Regs, a foreign national shall not be considered a spouse,

a CL partner, a conjugal partner or an adopted child of a person if …x, is not genuine and was entered into primarily for the purpose of acquiring any status or privilege under the Act.

Must be sponsored by family member, who is a Canadian Perm Res (or included in App.)o this is an agreement to support the family member for 3-10 years, depending on the

nature of the relationship. (+) you don’t need to pass the above points test (+) This class can skip the exclusion on ppl w/certain medical conditions

o ie they’ll let your kid in if he’s sick, even if they wouldn’t have let you in to begin with if you had the same condition.

o IRPA s. 38(2) and IRP Reg. 24 “excessive demand” medical admissibility is not applicable if applicant is spouse, conjugal partner, common-law partner or dependent child.

Econ/social/cultural benefits not presumed – separate study.←← Exclusions under s. 117(9)(d)

Family member not disclosed when family member first emigrated to Canada. Medical conditions of family member may render principal ineligible (?)..*

←← Bona fide relationships and Onus with prior deceit← Sanichara v. MCi 2005

Regs exclude non-bona-fide/genuine relationshipso Spouse is disqualified only if (1) the marriage is not genuine; and (2) the marriage was

entered into primarily for the purposes of acquiring any status or privilege under the act (intention element is removed)

o AND conjunctive (must be both), bit of a shift from old caselaw In judging legitimacy of marriage, tribunal looks at straightforward facts - frequency of phone

calls, household routine, details of marriage, etc. Determine plausibility and credibility of the testimony and any other evidence before the IAD

- contradictions without explanation. On BOP did not establish that marriage was not solely in order to immigrate to Canada; also

no reviewable error to justify the Court’s intervention.←← Salh 1988

He’d made a fraudulent refugee claim – deceitful to board prior about marital status.. now claim via arranged marriage

Officer held marriage to be a last ditch effort to immigrate Tribunal decision looks at evidence of marriage first in light of Legislative requirements

o Old test: Spouse is disqualified only if the marriage is entered into primarily for the purpose of gaining admission to Canada AND not with the intention of residing permanently with the other spouse

They deal with his previous abuse of the immigration system by saying his previous behaviour notwithstanding, the marriage agreement seems fine, and that’s what we’re looking at.

Dissent: Prior deceit creates a substantial onus to prove marriage (on the probabilities, becomes harder with case against him) o Incorrect.. But got around legislation of just focusing on marriage

*Assess credibility of marriage evidence, in and of itself.←← Processing ← Two applications required:

(i) Sponsorship (processed in Canada first) (ii) Permanent resident (visa) application (by family member) – meet class criteria

←← Remedies if an application is refused.:

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Permanent resident (visa) applicant may seek judicial review (must exhaust appeal rights), s. 67(1)

Sponsor may appeal refusal of visa application to the Immigration Appeal Division of the IRB [IRPA s. 63(1)]o Except where inadmissible for misrep, security or criminalityo H&C can only be exercised if applicant’s fall within proper defn’s - member of the family

class, + the sponsoro H&C can includes examining evidence anew

IAD holds a hearing de novo ←← Class 12 - Feb. 25th← Family Class con’t.← > Sponsorship ← > Effect of inadmissibility of family members←← Spouse

S. 2 Must be a valid marriage both in Canada AND where it took place (foreign marriage recognized as valid under Canadian law).o Polygamy is not recognized in Canada

“Validity” includes both legal capacity to marry (essential validity) and technical aspects of marriage ceremony (formal).o Formal is determined in accordance with the laws of the jurisdiction the marriage took

placeo Essential includes: prior existing marriages, non-consummation, consent, and prohibited

degrees of consanguinity.← Bhatti

Must determine the validity of the marriage; only in the family class if they qualify as ‘spouse’.

They find the marriage isn’t valid because the Dad signed the marriage certificate, but Paki laws require that the spouse or someone with power of attorney sign the certificate.

Shows that it’s not just about the Canadian laws; also consider laws of the country where the marriage took place.

Spouse or CL Partner Class in Canada may be sponsored o Per “Spousal Policy” includes out of status applicantso Cannot have an enforceable removal order against themo Exception to General rule that applicants for PR visas may not apply from within Canadao 6 mo’s, v. outside 8 – 17 mo’s; visitor visas will not be granted to those wishing to enter

Canada for the purpose of having their application processed from within.←← CL partner v. Conjugal

They both require a relationship of min 1 year, but CL partner (reg s. 1) requires cohabitation, conjugal partner doesn’t (reg s. 2)

Conjugal means it’s like a ‘marriage-type’ relationshipo Accounts for extenuating circumstances of a relationship.o Look at several criteria to assist in determination (M v. H): o Shelter (living arrangements), sexual/personal behav (exclusive, committed and

evidences by emotional, intellectual and physical interaction), services (mutual assistance), social activities, Economic support (financially independent or dependent, joint assets?) children, special perception (treated or perceived by the community as a couple).

Macapagal o Relationship must not be barred by legislation that would prohibit them from getting

married if they were in Canada. o Must not be in bad faith ~ genuine, bona fideo Looks at M&H factors; finds no relationship.

Caron o Same-sex partnerships CL, conj, (SCC, Marriage 2004) - look at same factors; timing of

relationship to meet def’n was at issue here

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o 2 things to note procedurally – Minister’s rep conceded there was a conjugal relationship during the relevant period, but the ‘judge’ still had to come to this finding as well.

o Appellant has the Burden of proof on the balance of prob. to demonstrate the relationship meets the requirements.

←Sponsorship IRP reg s.130-137

To be a sponsor, you must be 18+ Reside in Canada

o Exceptions – spouse who doesn’t reside in Canada but is a Can citizen and intends to live here w/sponsored spouse

File a sponsorship application. Must make an undertaking of assistance (3 or 10 years, with exceptions), ie promise to care

for sponsoree financially for a given period of timeo A K must be entered into by sponsor and gov.o Assigns any debt owed to gov, to sponsor (eg. to provincial gov for social services)o Repayment never happened, no mechanism set up to collect

Sponsorship application may be rejected o criminality and financial requirementso H & C allowed

←← Sponsorship application processing times:

Adopted Children, Children to be Adopted and Orphanso Processed daily on a priority basis

Spouse, CL or Conjugal Partner, Dependant children and Other relativeso Jan 21, 2009, 37 days

Parents and Grandparentso October 30, 2006 – 27 months

←← Parents & Grandparents ()()

Vazirio Allocating resources to control immigration #’s and policyo Deliberate prioritization against parents and grandparents in processing timeo Challenged gov’s ability to to do this against the interests of parents and grandparents –

Court held they are within their right So who is a parent anyways? Vong v. MCI

o Minister wants decision to allow appeal overturned;o Wants definition of ‘parents’ not to include step-parents

IRPA doesn’t include definition of ‘mother’ or ‘father’. They look at French definition, which says ‘parent’ requires blood relationship;

another definition of parent says related by blood or adoption (Vong made strong argument about looking to a number o factors for legislative intent, pointing to domestic family law for scope of ‘parent’).

Judge says it wasn’t legislative intent to include step-parents. ~ H&C, Ministerial discretion!

o S 15 argument of equality, per Gooseman?

← Dependent Child Someone under 22, AND not a CL spouse or partner (s. 121) OR over 22 AND have been, since before 22, substantially financially dependent on parents

AND full time student or unable to self-support because of physical/mental condition. Sandhu v. MCI 2002

o Bday was 8 mo’s after sent in application; 36 months before it was processedo 1st Lock in date - looked to date of receipt of application o 2nd factors not locked in (read in as decades of departmental policy)o Studies also has a quantitative and qualitative aspect

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Eg. Exclusion of children in married like relationship – Various IRPA objectives; International obligation and best interests of the child – resolve as charter issuer (right bearer), or H&C discretion (rule breaker asking for benevolence)

←← Inadmissibility

Exemption from point system, and partners/children from excessive demands on health/social services – but:

s. 40(1)(b), inadmissible if sponsored by an inadmissible person s. 42, foreign national (except protected person) is inadmissible if their (accompanying and

sometimes unacc.) family member is inadmissible (exceptions re: certain non-acc dependents IRP Reg., s. 23)o Reason for non-disclosureo Could sponsor - medical inadmissibility doesn’t apply hereo But when applying together – would render both inadmissable

←← De Guzman (spent a lot of time on this case)

IRP s.117(9)(d) – Didn’t disclosed her 2 kids/marriage in her application b/ would have been discluded from the family class and thus unable to immigrate. She admitted to and brought her daughter, but wasn’t able to sponsor her 2 sons to join her once she arrived because of this provision. She challenged this provision. o Before – punished with potential deportation (which never occurred); people were

benefiting from own non-disclosure Argued 3 things:

o Outside the scope of the legislation Delegated authority - overstepping its bounds with this provision, since it’s trying to

impose punishments outside the scope of IRPA and the regs. S. 3(3)f

o s.7 argument; Non-interference with the family IRPA s. 25 as an alternative

o international law argument; Rights of families to live together and best interest of the child s. 3(3) f – to be compliant with IN obligations, must override s. 117(9)(b) Also talk about s.25 and the best interests of the children

Family reunification v. admissibility concerns Rights v. moral culpability of misrepresentation > Comes down to Enforcement/control of border

← Issue # 1 - IRPA & purpose – authorizes Restricting regs? or inconsistent ? Mostly arguments that went nowhere – division of IRPA each authorizing regs as limiting, no;

Generally suitable consequences for misrep; Right to sponsor in Leg, can’t be removed by regs, no

Selection of immigrants and reuniting families - It’s NOT about culpability, this is outside its scope and is not consistent with the framework of the legislation/IRPA as a whole (divisions for reg permission)

Found: Can use enforcement ~ act should be read as a wholeo ~o Best Interest of the child has it’s own place (s. 25), need not roll in with every single

provisiono Is this consistent with the court’s interpretation to read the act as a whole?o How much was the decision influence by D’s moral culpability? Eg. As opposed to father

who didn’t know of, or were estranged from their children.← Issue #2 – S. 7 Charter Argument

s.7 - State interference with family unity and thus libertyo Court says s.7 isn’t engaged because there wasn’t a sufficient nexus b/w the state action

and the separation o Charter only protects against state action - court says she was the source of this

separation, not the gov. Crt also looks at s.25 IRPA H&C as an alternative provision to the challenge presented above , to bring sons

o Risk of reliance on “H & C” as the go to provision, rather than classes generally

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o Now there is an H & C specific to s. 117(9) exemptiono Must see s. 25 more broadly, when court construes as a potential solution to charter

challenges.← Issue #3 - International argument.

S. 3(3)(f) was interpreted as making IN law more than contextual, but less than full incorporationo IN law is generally adopted - helpful, contextualo Legislation must be crystal clear if it will conflicto if any way consistent with IN law, then must be read that way o Unclear legal status where Canada is a “signatory”; but where Canada is legally bound,

this applies (court digresses)o Not each provision as consistent, but whether prov w/ others, renders IRPA as a whole

non-compliant Court finds s. 117 is consistent

o IN consensus that it’s open to a state to regulate its borders and regulate immigration policy

o This is about who can enter; which is different than deportation; CRC doesn’t force allowing entry

o D brought this on herself, and also s. 25 is another door for her children. State is not prohibiting reunification.

This resulted in a law change, in regards to s.3(3)(f). It has to do with improper exercise of delegated authority.

←← Audrey Macklin “Public Entrance/Private membership”

On sponsorship undertakings generally, which she says is related to the rise of the social welfare state. She’s especially critical of the sponsorship criteria related to being on welfare (related to Guzman).

Rational for family class reflected in a fundamental economic bias 1st Critique - Women sponsored by spouses

o Imbalance of powero Disinclined to leave – abuse, etc, while application is pending

2nd – Undertaking traced to the rise of the welfare stateo state has more responsibility to members to provide more services and supports – so

they began letting in few immigrantso Why is sponsorship undertaking imposed for family coming afterwards, but not along

with principle applicant (eg. like econ class)? or for Canadians generally? less trustworthy? Criminal code provisions not enough? Just about controlling entrance numbers

o Fundamentally about economies – over family reunificationo Bureaucratic reorganization explicitly undermining class and certain individuals within

the class … or else it’s just random

←← Guzman v. MCI

Young immigrant with a child here, who married a temp res; She was on welfare, but he could work if she could sponsor him; She was denied b/c she was on welfare, so she argued against the provision using s. 15.

o Generally the purpose is to prevent people from being a economic drain – based on this makes sense.

o But here, he could work and help the family to be more economically stable – provision didn’t work here.

Result? .. too bad.←← > Classes really separate? Or econ concerns supercede everything? (w/ CRC in its own pocket??)←← Class 13 - Feb.27th ← TOPIC THREE: REFUGEE PROTECTION

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← REFUGEES: INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT ss. 3, 3(2), 96-98, schedule←← UNHCR - Lesley Stalker Assistant Legal Councel

International and domestic refugee protection←← Refugee Distribution

2,65400 - Middle East and North Africa 2,271,200 - Africa, excluding North Africa 2,674,200 - Asia and the Pacific 1,580,500 - Europe 499,900 - Americas

o TOTAL: 9,679,800← Protracted situations/Camps

Where refugee populations of 25,000 persons or more have been in exile in a developing country for 5 years or more

UNHCR estimated that in 2005 over 6 million refugees in protracted situations and more than 30 locations

←← Historical Background

1914 – 18 – Never again!o Russian revolution and Europeo Leauge of Nations, 1920o 1st issues – IDPs and Refugees as a threat to stabilityo Responsibility IN community for large groups of people was hard to sell

1939-45 New wave of horrific prosecutiono Moral/physical shell shock – 14 mil refugeeso Number of temporary organization set up tp respond

1950, Dec – UNHCR

1921-1930: High Commissioner for Refugees of the LoN ’21 – starting point for refugee law with the High Commissioner for Refugees of the League of

Nations.1931-1938: Nansen International Office for Refugees1933-1938: High Commissioner for Refugees coming from Germany1939-1946: High Commissioner for Refugees under the LofN Protection1939-1947: Inter-Governmental Committee for Refugees (IGCR)1943-1947: United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA)1947-1952: International Refugee Organization (IRO)1951- United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees + Convention1967– Protocol to remove temporal/geographic limitation on refugee defn+ Regional Orgs to more fully address local nature of refugee problem

Definition of refugee from Art.1A(2), ’51 Refugee Convention:← A PERSON WHO owing to a well founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable, or, owing to such a fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside of the country of his habitual residence as result of such events is, unable or, owing to such a fear, is unwilling to return to it.

It’s an indiv assessment; each indiv is assessed as a refugee The indiv must have a well-rounded fear of persecution

o subjectively and objectively; ‘objective’ part can be difficult, because the officer is considering the ‘country of origin info’, and this info can be very limited & hard to come by.

They must be persecutedo But what does this entail? It isn’t actually defined. o It’s been considered a threat to life, serious violations of human rights; it can be

cumulative.

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o Def includes specific reasons for persecution, and there must be a nexus b/w the persecution and the supposed reasons for it (ie race, religion, nationality, membership of a social group/political opinion).

They must be outside their country of nationality. o What about IDP’s (internally displaced persons)? Or stateless personso UNHCR is doing more and more to help these ppl. o > Article on IDP’s; Locher and Betts ??

51 Focus on civil political rights vs. socio-economic rights o Hathaway p.470: “Convention adopted an incomplete and politically partisan human

rights rationale.” 51 Scope limited to persons who became refugees as a result of events occurring in Europe

before 1 January 1951 (1967 Protocol removed limitation)

UNHCR [General Assembly] has 2 big arms: International Protection

o Who qualifies? Refugee status determinations (80 countries) ~ though seems to be compromising

mandate w/ many inadequacies (secretive, x impartial etc), new policies.. IDPS? Difficult due to this historical relationship b/w State and its people; sovereignty

and territorial integrity towards non-intervention; not necessarily accessible to IN assistance

o Promotes adoption of instruments, critical role in policy making Obtaining Durable solutions

o Repatriation (voluntary, not forceful – when safe return permits); local integration in country of asylum; resettlement to a 3rd country (when 1st two can’t happen; you leave the 1st for a 2nd one temporarily, then to the 3rd) – usually Canada/US/Australia, who are the hardest to get to.

o 1/400 spots available (100 000 total)o Responsibility-sharing/refugee distributiono Protracted situations/camps

Encourage government to sign conventionso Limited at first to Europe, and events prior to 1950 causing displacemento But 1967 protocol to expand, recognized and acceded to

51/67 conventions as core instruments for these responsibilitieso But changing nature of asylum

Tension exists on the role it should play – supervisory v. limited influence it wield with statesNumbers for Protection

Responsible for 11.4/16 mil refugees worldwide (x Palestine)o Physical and Legal Securityo Usually not far from place they fled, & Rebels continue persecutiono Shelter, water, food; security within the camps (rape)

IDPs ? 51 mil (Half conflict and half from natural disasters) Returnees – 731,000 Stateless persons – 3 mil (/12 mil) – Hard to count

o Soviet Union & Baltic states; Kenya 31.7 mil // 67 mil/

Revolt & Reform- Challenges to ’51 Convention’s relevance (Critique of Articles)

o Former UNHCR High Commissioner Ruud Lubbers acknowledged that while the “51 Refugee Convention remains the cornerstone of the international refugee protection regime,it alone does not suffice.”

The Law of Refugee Statuso Conventions focused on protection status (from x)o In relation to the soviet bloc, accepted civil and political dissidents; w/o allowing victims

lacking other basic rights (food, education, health care) ~ so couldn‘t take political advantage

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o 1967 helped distribute Europe’s WWII burden throughout UN members, removed ‘events before 51 only’ limitation

The Agenda for Protection, arising out of the 2001 Global Consultations on the 1951 Convention’s 50th anniversary introduced the notion of Convention Plus in 2002:o The “plus” concerns the development of special agreements or multilateral

arrangements to ensure improved burden sharing, with countries in the North and South working together to find durable solutions for refugees. This includes comprehensive plans of action to deal with mass outflows, and agreements on “secondary movements”, whereby the roles and responsibilities of countries of origin, transit, and potential destination are better defined. It also includes agreements aimed at better targeting development assistance in refugees’ regions of origin, and multilateral commitments for resettlement of refugees.

o Focus on burden sharingo We are trying to expand the Convention in a period where states are receding from their

original obligations; disconnect between their stated intention & what they are willing to do, party because of post-911 increased securitization

Crisis and Cure’ Hathawayo ‘Hathaway (the man for refugee law), wrote about a temporary return regime. Collective

framework emphasizing temporary protection in the region over the individual system for assessment and asylum.

o Analogy to insurance scheme for states for equitable burden sharing arising from the massive influx of forces migrants

o Standard consistent with fundamental human rights – devised to facilitate repatriation.o This article is attacked (incl in our reading) because it is seen as de-emphasizing

countries duties to the refugees. o There’s also an idea of ‘commodification’, where the refugees are becoming a

commodity, essentially being traded etc.←← Class 14 Mar 04/09← Refugees: International Context con’t.

← Non-refoulement This is what really matters in refugee law. Article 33(1) of the ’51 Refugee Convention

o No Contracting State shall expel or return (“refouler”) a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion

o A right not to be sent back (So it’s not a right to enter, although this is a minor distinction) for a refugee facing persecution.

o So this changes a country’s right to let or not let in whoever they want; technically, they don’t have to accept them, but they can’t return them if they’re getting in.

o It’s a humanitarian consensus that has led to countries allowing this exception in their sovereignty; we should be letting these ppl in.

Regional Expansions and Qualifications on the principle o OAU Convention (1969)o Cartagena Declaration (1984)o Compare: “Qualification” directive in Europe which limits 1951 Convention definition to

non-European Union citizens + Rights of protection from punishment for illegal entry, prohibition from discrimination,

freedom of association, movement, religion, and access to education, employment, and social assistance

←← Reality

Duty of non-refoulemento Government reluctant to admit refugees into their territory, esp at border crossings and

airportso Looking for effective migration management – trying to decrease bureaucracy backlog,

and don’t want to be overwhelmed with numbers

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o Ideas of extra territorial processing and/or protection in region of origin W/ increasing economic migration around the world, obvious need to set procedures and

reform.. not of values, but how it operates Canada

o Out of 67 mil – only responsible for those who make it to our bordero The number was decreasing since 2001, now seems to be climbing dramatically –

20,000, to 30,000 +o Pressure on Gov and legal aido Immigration and refugee board backlog

UNHCR & Processo But changing nature of asylum = difficulties; IDPs, econ migrants, security concerns,

costs to states associated with asylum, growing scale of migrants, rising numbers in 90’so States increasingly restrictive policieso Shift since the cold war of states moving from asylum to containment in region of origin;

numerous policies designed to reduce #’s (non-arrival, carrier sanctions, STC, detention, denial f social assistance)

o Response Agenda for protection Is Denying access to refugee determination in Canada – denying protection in general? Burden sharing (safe 3rd country) – denying protection by offloading onto a 3rd county?

←← Safe Third Country Agreements

Purpose: To share burdens for protection required by the convention Stop individuals at US, to avoid having to process claims, which are less well founded than

others – or which could be processed elsewhere Regs permit Canada to enter into these – pushed by Canada

o S. 101/102, Reg 159.1-.7o Only apply to borders, for logistical reasons (must know where someone came from)

US agreed after Sept 11, for increased control over borderso Agreement does work 2 ways, but not a lot go to US from Can

Have because Mexican refugees were dwarfing claims from Columbia, Somalia and Zimbabweo Accept 15%, compared with 58%o Higher number, plus higher refusal = resource backlog

Exceptions – such as with one family member in Canada, unaccompanied minor, a stay issued; exception to the exception such as offence punishable by death penalty (p.487)

Advantages: Prevents forum-shopping; avoids assuming responsibility for those whose refugee claims US has already rejected

Critiques: Seals the border; asylum seekers should be able to decide where they wish to resettle

← Reg. 101. (1) A claim is ineligible to be referred to the Refugee Protection Division if [...](e) the claimant came directly or indirectly to Canada from a country designated by the regulations, other than a country of their nationality or their former habitual residence

← 102.  (1) (a) designating countries that comply with Article 33 of the Refugee Convention and Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture… ← (2) The following factors are to be considered in designating a country under paragraph ← (1)(a):IN Law←   (3) The Governor in Council must ensure the continuing review of factors set out in (2) with respect to each designated country.← 159.3 The United States = STC← 159.5 – Narrow exception to permit crossing←←← Canadian Council for Refugees v. MCI, FC/CA on STCA

Attempt for crts to declare STCA invalid, because US isn’t a safe third country (eg’s p. 488), and it results in ineligible refugee protection for certain asylum seekers

1. Regs are Ultra Vires – IRPA can only designate a STC that complies with IN conventions or Refugees and Tortureo Regs can’t exceed the scope of statutory provisions empowering it (Must comply with

IN!)

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2. OR Unconstitutionalo S. 7 and 15 – some individuals will effectively be refouled because STC isn’t protecting

themo US- Don’t respect Conventions o Harmful/negative processing of claims in US which would be allowed in Canada

Accepted in lower court as unconstitutionalo Crt took a substance approach to the case o S. 7 applied due to risk of refoulement, where border officials return indv per the STCA

(similar to death penalty) Where Canada's participation is a necessary precondition for the deprivation - an

entirely foreseeable consequence of Canada's participation... FJ – non-refoulement - arbitrariness/lack of discretion and overbreadth of legislation,

arbitrary detention, right to counsel and right to review Canadian immigration officer retains no discretion to allow a claimant into Canada

who does not fit one narrow exception to the STCA (for family members and death penalty) - leads to arbitrary results which do not take the individual claimant’s circumstances into account + Arbitrarily only applies to land crossing claimant

o S. 15 - Crt pulled everyone up to Canadian standard – X deferential assessment with Gender based claims in US leads to risk of harm, not

present if claim was processed in Canada Has a discriminatory effect on the way they deal with terrorists; torture (race and

religion), and gender CA - overturned

o Regs are w/i the power of the governmento Yes country must comply with Convention (IN Law!),

102(2) requires the GIC consider, prior to designating a country, the country’s policies and practices with respect to the Refugee Convention and the Convention against Torture as well as its human rights record.

3(3)f, 3(2)b&d Objective to share responsible for refugee claims with

o But not about court assessing if US complies (actual compliance or compliance in absolute terms) Up to cabinet to decide and designate – did the government turn their attention

here? Y Assessing whether another state is complying with treaty is a political matter – not

legal IRPA doesn’t change this! Only juridiction to assess if GIC acted in bad faith or for an improper purpose – no

suggestion here of this.o Fundamental as an IN convention – court always has oversight to protect IRPA, which

incorporates a treaty Hands off at the IN level – and 3rd country

+ Ongoing review of (factors pointing to) compliance - Y Charter looked at Political Q, not substance

o To difficult in a vacuum – Person must try to get in and be denied- no standing, no one directly effected “John Doe” had never been presented, therefore not engaged

Practice has changedo More log time for CBSA to assess if TCA applies, or exception existso 3-5 days – can obtain council and get a stay of removal while they challenge claim

(Support of NGOs, lawyers) + No violation pf the charter would occur because CBSA officer would have to apply

legislation is a way consistent with charter = discretion to see if risk is present and apply law as appropriateo though CBSA officer has no legal traning.. o perhaps not the best way to circle issue.

←← further reading on STCA - written submissions filed by the Canadian Council for Refugees for leave to appeal to SCC (denied), they provide a clear summary of the issues raised.

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http://www.ccrweb.ca/documents/STCA-SCC-leave.pdf←← Class 15, Mar 10← REFUGEE PROTECTION IN CANADA - INTODUCTION

Persons and Process←← Convention Refugees and Persons in Need of Protection ←← Refugee Protection

This part of IRPA is not about selecting desirable immigrants (or is it?) Humanitarian consensus International obligations under Refugees Convention and CAT explicitly incorporated in IRPA Is there a Charter right to asylum?

←← Statistics

Helping more people (burden sharing in the world) – allocate more to privately sponsored (3/4 are economically better off – were able to get here; + uses a lot of money spent figuring that out) o 3. Refugees (s. 12 ) *Non-refoulement

Dependants (refugees who have left family members) Just over 10% acquire permanent resident – into a big part of the legislation or program – but

a big part of the discourse. Humanitarian consensus, a state pro-refugee?

←← Immigrant Category←

← Number Admitted

← Percent of Total New Permanent Residents

← Government-assisted Refugees←

← 7,574←

← 3.20←

← Privately-sponsored Refugees ← 3,588←

← 1.52←

← Protected Persons in Canada← (People who came to Canada and made a claim)

← 11,700←

← 4.94←

← Dependents Abroad←

← 5,094 ← 2.15←

← Total ← 27,956 ← 11.81

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←← Who has refugee protection? IRPA s.95← s. 95 Refugee protection conferred on:

Convention refugees Persons in need of protection

o Refugees and protected persons determined by the RPDo Protection claims allowed under PRRA (risk assessment)

Protection up until Status has not been vacated and has not ceased o vacated sometimes, such as for fraud or misrep in original application, but almost never

ceased (‘where risk has ended’) Persons in similar circumstances selected abroad (IRPA, 13(2), Reg. 138-151)

o Refugee and Humanitarian Resettlement Program w/ UNHCR, referral groups, and private sponsorship groups select refugees for resettlement in Canada

o Sponsor and refugee must meet requirements, unable to return or remain in country granting temporary protection; medical security and criminality screening

←← “Protected persons”

IRPA s. 96 ‘Convention refugees’ – international law:CR is person who, by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion, … (x for leaving)

S. 97 Persons in need of protection (Derived fr Conv against torture)97. (1) PNP is a person in Canada whose removal to their country/s of nationality or, if they do not have, their country of former habitual residence, would subject them personally… (x for returning)

How should these be interpreted, applied, and whether their consistent with the charter S. 98 Exclusions “A person referred to in section E or F of Article 1 of the Refugee

Convention is not a Convention refugee or a person in need of protection.”o Whether person has status or ability to be resident somewhere other than where asylum

is being soughto Being undeserving of protection (criminality, war crimes, crimes against humanity)

Non-refoulement s. 115o Prohibitions on return to place where protected person at risko Exceptions for criminality, security (again goes against Canada’s humanitarian role), s.

115(2)o Criticisms of these exceptions – not found in the convention, which calls for absolute

protection (also, goes beyond threat to security, to face persecution on the basis of their past acts)

←← How to make a refugee protection claim in Canada:← AT port of entry or an inland CIC/CBSA officer, if eligible, refers to IRB

Prohibitions S.99 if a removal order has already been made against the individuals - Cannot be referred to

the board,o Where at port of entry – suspect (docs), and officer makes removal order (person says

they understand, happens quickly)o May be able to make a PRRA – but deportation order is still valid and enforceable

S. 101 Ineligibility*o Safe-third countryo Recognition as refugee in another countryo Rejected by IRB alreadyo Inadmissible on security/criminality groundso 101(2) Danger to public, renders those who’ve committed criminal offenses outside

Canada ineligible to have claim determines by RPD S. 100 If eligible, claim must be referred to RPD w/i 3 days. If no eligibility determination in

that time, deemed eligible.←← Hearing before the RPD← p. 539* + Charts in Supp.

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May go through trial process or expedited hearing per RPO recommendation (bottom 542)o Expedited opinion forwarded to board member who decides if claim is accepted w/o

hearing *Satisfy on BOP well-founded fear of prosecution or qualify for protection RPD is Completely independent of the minister and the border guards .. though minister is

responsive to parliament, who appoints board members (but is independent) RPD Rules - For process, witnesses, disclosure etc.

o Assessing credibilityo The process really is quite court-likeo Sworn testimony under oath, interpreter, council (need not be lawyer), can call expert

witness, document support, give testimony and legal argumento Too formal for those of terrible experiences + culture shock?o UNHCR has right to observe any hearing

RPD Guidelines (eg. Vulnerable Persons Guidelines/Gender Guidelines)o Response to the formalitieso Policy is, if board is going to depart from a case in the guide, must explain why (master

of own process).o VPG designed to accommodate processes that acknowledge the vulnerability of refugee

claimants (specific to children and to gender as well – substantive guidelines, which recognize gender based persecution)

RPD Policies & decisions (eg. Jurisprudential guides)o Jurisprudential guides & RPD decisions are not precedent, bound by only federal court

(but again, must explain departure).o Attempt to create consistency, but allow flexibilityo Large % are not lawyers

Inquisitorial, not adversarial, processo Truth in the middle of P and D.. here trying to draw out the story, with the assistance of

the refugee protection officer (like board’s council); and Judge has own ? ; Refugee claimant is entitled to a representative.

o Process may shift to being adversarial, because minister may intervene in the process – particularly where there is an exclusion being argued (eg. undeserving, war crimes etc.).

Central issue usually is credibility F. Crepeau “ The Complexity of Determining Refugee-hood”

o Difficulty is immense.o Complexity is formed by cultural, psychological and legal factorso How people lie, how people tell the truth, and cultural factors (eg. eye contact, tone of

voice, dates, trauma affected recollection and manner in which story is relayed)o Claim is Individualized at the end of the dayo As simple as who are you?o Board members – all Canadian citizens, which colours understanding of credibilityo Appointment process (careful.. has changed since article, done by parliament, with

committee review on substantive qualifications; and training)o [Fact finding, before legal questions]

←← After RPD hearing

Person meets definition of protected person – Y positive, or N negative Positive determination results in refugee protection but NOT permanent resident status

o S. 21(2) protected person may apply for PR status: Pretty much automatically granted, unless they are considered inadmissible Hang in limbo status as a foreign national - can’t be deported Can include in application dependants overseas, spouse and children Medical inadmissibility doesn’t apply (unless creates physical risk on Canadians); and

no low income cut-off Negative determination

o No right of appeal for now, but you can seek leave for judicial review (Removal order is stayed) Unless RPD states “no credible basis for they claim,” stay will not be issued and

removal can occur w/i 15 days

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Judicial review – fact finding is deferred (enormously – just within the range of possible outcomes)

Question must be certifiedo Also may seek a PRRA and/or H&C consideration

H&C can be made anytime by anyone; but does not grant stay automatically (fed court can order it)

PRRA will only consider new evidence, removal order issuedo Bill C-291 Refugee Appeal Division (In parliament)

Handout. Paper review (4th division of the board, staffed with special expertise, looking at

substance of the claim) X, efficiency, everyone will appeal – no IN obligation or charter obligation; credibility

difficult to assess on paper, standard of deference with backlog←On-campus Federal Court judicial review←← Class 16 - Mar 11 – missed*←RFUGEE PROTECTION IN CANADA cont…←← Suresh

Charter right to asylum? Extend beyond torture? Non-refoulement is a large factor to weigh in the balance of interests, even against Canadian

security …

←ELEMENTS OF THE REFUGEE DEFINTION←← CONVENTION REFUGEE5 elements –outside country of residence -- Well-founded -- fear of persecution - nexus to an enumerated ground – X state protection – + x exclusion.←← IRPA, s. 96 – A Convention refugee is a person who, by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons (nexus) of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion,

(a) is outside each of their countries of nationality and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to avail themself of the protection of each of those countries; or

(b) not having a country of nationality, is outside the country of their former habitual residence and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to return to that country.

Canada (A.G.) v. Ward Leading SCC case on inclusion in def’n; Pre-IRPA Nature of refugee protection No need for state complicity in persecution

o includes where state is unable to protecto Presumption of state protection well-founded fear + unable to protect = entitled to

fear persecutiono [but requires admission or convincing confirmation of state’s inability to protect]

Unwilling or unable to avail of protectiono Inability – where protection is denied; mere appearance of state ineffectiveness will not

suffice; but need not always give sate opportunity to respond, only where objectively unreasonable not to have sought protection

o unwilling opts not to approach the state by reason of his or her fear on an enumerated basis

Scope of enumerated grounds of persecution (+nexus)o Persecution as a sustained or systemic violation of human rights or systemic

denial of core human rightso Membership in a particular social group is linked to discriminationo Political opinion – key is perception and link to machinery of government

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o Where effect of the persecution experience is disproportionately experiences by those who share the relevant characteristics (discrimination)

Dual nationality – avail of second protection←← 1. Refugee must be outside Country of Nationality/Residence

Statelessness alone insufficient Country of nationality includes country where X can obtain citizenship by renouncing a

different one (Williams) Kemel

o Application for Canadian passport made by Canadian citizen. Met all requirements for passport. There is provision for Minister to refuse on grounds of national security. Kamel was alleged to be linked to terrorism.

o Justice Noel threw out with refusal because it interfered with Kamel’s mobility rights under the Charter

←← 2. “Well-founded fear”

S. 96 threshold is “more than a mere possibility”o [evidentiary vs. legal burden / s.96 v. s.97]

Subjective and objective elements (State of mind, and well founded) Forward looking – from time of examination for status

o Exception : Compelling Reasons Defence out of previous persecution, torture, treatment or punishement s. 108(4)

Well-founded – often adduce to evidence from the past, or those who are similarly ~ claimant situation viewed in context of relevant background situated

State protectiono Need “clear and convincing evidence of a state’s inability to protect” to overcome

presumption that state protection is available (Ward)o Presumption that a functioning democracy is able to provide protection (Ward, Carrillo)o “A claimant seeking to rebut the presumption of state protection must adduce relevant,

reliable and convincing evidence which satisfies the trier of fact on a balance of probabilities that the state protection is inadequate” (Carrillo)

o See also: V.S.X. (what kind of evidence is considered?) Internal flight alternative

o Two part testo Thirunavukkarusu

←← Class 17, Mar 13?← 3. Unwilling or unable to avail self of State’s Protection (s.108(4))← > Internal flight alternative

Requires a well-founded fear; no reason why they should be able to avail themselves of a viable alternative in their home country

To what degree – one small place in a corner of the country; what if this place required travel across a war zone?

Two part test:o i) On the BoP, no serious possibilities of persecution in the IFA;

Thiruavukkarusu Burden on claimant, but obligation on minister/board to warm IFA will be raised Per procedural fairness, must be put on notice in this particular claim– but then must

show risk everywhere Shouldn’t be more than a mere possibility??

Between in the areas = not safeo (Attempt to separate burden of proof – evidential and legal.. though artificial to think the

officer goes through it systematically and clearly this way)o ii) AND - Living in IFA is not unreasonable, taking claimant’s circumstances into account

Unreasonable? Include work, visiting family? Living in the desert of middle of the jungle X; Across war zone X

Objectively reasonable to expert him or her to seek safety there before in Canada or elsewhere.. would it be unduly harsh to expect them to move somewhere less hostile?

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Can’t just be speculation – must be reasonable and attainable – and identifiable. Travel to the IFA; unduly harsh – practically, safely and legally accessible; State

persecution? Pursuit on non-state actor? Exposure to other serious risk? (UNHCR) Not a matter of convenience or attractiveness on the balance (pros and cons), but

whether they should make due, before traveling across the world (Refugee protection as a last resort)

IFA in the conventions – Not required to threaten individual or exhaust all options; nor invoked to undermine human rights tenants underlying the protection regime..

←← 4. The Refugee Must have a Fear of Persecution← “Persecution”

> About international protection – not about granting everyone in the world the same level of protection as is available domesticallyo Persecution occurs when there is a threat to life and other serious human rights

violations on account of enumerated ground – type of harm that would be inconsistent with basic duty of protection owed by a state to its nationals

o S. 15/Workplace – won’t be characterized as persecution for the case of granting refugee status

Linking persecution and human rights (discrimination) Persecution v Harassment (cumulative effects)

o Bobrik – Board viewed as bad treatment, but that it didn’t quite reach the level of persecution

o Court - Given how extended the treatment was (2 years, no protection available) – cumulatively had reached the level (threshold) of persecution, though on the evidence and individually would just be harassment

o Sexual orientation as a particular social group for the refugee protection (increasingly so) – moved to an issue of credibility/proof; Also, are they facing harassment rather than persecution?.. Hidden nature in some countries creates problem (where does the truth lie? Fear of untrue claims).. forward looking? Where being gay is illegal..

Persecution v. prosecutiono About international land surrogate protection – protection from injustice, not fugitives

from justiceo Prosecution for a crime is not persecution, in Canada (ethical disputes, eg. blocking

logging; but no legal dispute)o Possible for general law to violate funamental human rights and have the potential to

constitute persecutiono Problem

1. Criminalized as offenses outside Canada, which wouldn’t be here (avoiding conscription; desertion)

2. + Punishment, where a similar offense or act would never attract such a level of punishment here (death penalty).

o P. 575. Test: Neutrality of Law of general application (neutral in a democratic state – like the US)? Whether law is persecutory // Inherent or principle effect of ordinary law // Onus on applicant to show laws as inherently or otherwise persecutory // law n question as realted to a Convention ground (not just oppressive regime)

Zolfargharkani - Would have been chemical weapons used against a Kurdish resistance – Iranian fled and made a refugee claim

o Nature of punishment here different because person was a very vocal advocate against the Iraq war; not just law of general application, conscription, but + illegal warfare = persecution for political considerations – Motive for leaving Could always link conscience to political opinion (consciences objection – and will go

to jail for evasion) Linked largely – to politically criminal and unacceptable.

o What is individual being asked to do – participate in war crime? Felt it was wrong and contrary to IN law – Against crime – tantamount to persecution.

US Case – Individual + military action + Condemnation by IN community; ‘illegality of war’ irrelevant, no deliberate policy or official indifference for combatants to violate humanitarian law

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China cheung – risk of jail and prosecution for being smuggled out. So disproportionate, flips to persecution.

o Gender based claim for not wearing veil – subject to whipping (Disproportionate punishment)

o Brutality under the veil of law is still brutality Persecution v. General Risk resulting from Civil War (IRB Guideline 1)

o General breakdown, and state is unable to protect – IS high level of criminality a real risk (kidnap, robbed, extorted), and state can’t protect everyone. Not captured by convention. Require +

o Salibian p. 579 - Difficult because individual risk – not just group (OAU – African, includes both individuals and groups under situations like this, or environmental disasters)

o Can sometimes engage personalized risk aspects, or sub-grp o To move from one to the other, under same circumstances -- Must link risk to a

convention ground. Applicant doesn’t need to show actual personalized persecution (now or in future);

enough to show (more than a mere possibility of) risk to sub-group the applicant or claimant belongs (578? 3 factors) – link to a ground (ie. **Single women…)…

Other approach – differential risk; test was rejected.o See also: V.S.X.

Agents of Persecutiono Includes but not limited to state actorso Where state know and tolerate, refuse, or prove unable, to offer effective protection

[Still, link to ground, ie. Mafia = not political] Gender based persecution claims

o 1993 IRB Guideline 4: General Proposition; Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender Based Persecution (1996 Update)

o Must be followed unless compelling and exceptions reasons otherwise … Although gender is not specifically enumerated as one of the grounds for

establishing Convention refugee status, the definition of Convention refugee may properly be interpreted as providing protection for women who demonstrate a well-founded fear of gender-related persecution by reason of any one, or a combination of, the enumerated grounds.

o If link to one ground – then persecution, even if link is made via path of gendero OG – Supp 136 – Decision of Refugee Protection Division

[5] Ethiopia, sent on a plane with an Arab man to Lebanon, forced into slavery 20 hours a day.

Found her way to Canada to make a protection claim. Single women trafficked from Ethiopia at risk of persecution Board starts with the gender guidelines Risk related in part to their women-ness, but also to another aspect of the definition Link gender, to individualness, to risk – for protection

←← 5. Grounds for Persecution

Persecution motivated by a ground meets the test for Statuso As does non-state persecution where govt’s failure to protect is motivated by one of the

5 factors Enumerates, but recognize possibility of multiple, overlapping, or intersecting grounds;

claimant may be unable to specify the exact nexus b/w fear and ground; ultimately for decision make to ascertain reasons and qualificationo Eg. Causal link is established where persecutor is unmotivated by a ground but the effect

of the persecution experienced disproportionately by those who share the relevant characteristics, e.g. trafficking victims, women – handy work to fit

← - Race Broadest sense ~discrimination here can often entail persecution (not nec. with other

grounds)← - Nationality

Interpreted broadly to encompass citizenship as well as membership in an ethnic/linguistic group

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4 forms of persecution: (1) Based on status of person as foreign national; (2) Stateless person; (3) Situation where government strips portion of citizens of their nationality & ascribes a new nationality to them that allows them to be repressed under newly established regime; (4) State is composed of former sovereign states & person in persecuted on basis of action or perceived allegiance to former sovereign state (Waldman, p. 586)

Dual Nationality: Must establish that face danger in both countries (Ward)←← - Religion

Broad – beliefs, ofranization, rejection of religion← - Political Opinion

Nature of Poli opinion – Need note be actually expressed by pr ascribed to the claimant Chose more broad interpretation – “any opinion on any matter in which the machinery of the

State, government and policy may be engaged” (Ward)o Where political opinion attracted persecution

← - Membership in a Particular Social Group Perspective of last resort, and anti-discrimination (s. 15) + Group cannot be defined by persecution alone (eg. X just grp subject to torture) V.O.G. – not women at risk in Ethiopia – but women who have been trafficked. Ward affirmed this is not a “catch-all” category

o Not allowed here – wasn’t part of a group discriminated against Chan

o Forced sterilization of womeno Man – restricted to one childo Majority – not a member of a particular social group – defining it by nature of the risk

aloneo Lafore – (Judge from Ward) Group unchangeable in characteristic.. so fundamental to

their dignity, historical permanence… Would find Mr. Chan fits Distinction between what one is, or what one does Someone who might have another child – parenting is what someone is; not does

(distinction is probably too formalistic – though not moving away from test) Group – don’t have to voluntary associate in a formal way – Agent of persecution, if

seen as having a shared attribute; whether you would feel united with those is irrelevant; but whether you can be seen as having a shared attribute (From Audrey Mackland)

Individuals who have more than one child (Group) + risk attached.←← EXCLUSION CLAUSES

Intended to protect the integrity of the institution of asylum But should incorporate a proportionality test to balance conduct for exclusion with

consequences of refoulement – so that it stays consistent with the overriding humaniarin object and purpose of the Convention

← Article 1E - Last resort provisionConvention shall not apply to a person recognized by competent authorities of the country of residence as having rights and obligations of those with nationality. o Must be able to enter and remain relatively unconditionally (Shamlou)o Do not need right identical to those of a citizen, but ability to return and remain in

country; consistent with international conventionas and treaties relating to rights and obligations (Kroon)

o What if rights existed (Status), but lapsed when they came to Canada? Open to officer to look at circumstances as they are at the time the determination is being made – but also take into account circumstances as they were when they came to Canada

←← Article 1F > Don’t want to protect people doing the persecution – Acts so grave, person is rendered deserving

Convention shall not apply, with serious reasons for considering that: (a) committed a crime against peace, a war crime, or a crime against humanity(b) committed a serious non-political crime outside the country of refuge (c) has been guilty of acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the UN.

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Is the purpose of the Articles to avoid providing a safe haven to fugitives from justice, or to protect exclude serious criminals from Canadian territory?

Applies to individuals trying to evade the consequences of their actions Jayasecara – maybe actually about protecting Canada too (security), doors never open to

someone who might pose a security threat. International or domestic national concerns?

←← Requirements

Proof?o Les than BOP, but more than mere suspicion/notice (Onus on the Minister, who

intervenes – though if minister fails to intervene, open to the board to consider exclusion, must put person on notice – doesn’t move the burden to disprove)

o Concern of low threshold - About where this fits in the legal regime – Immigration, not criminal (fundamental distinction) ~ level and importance of state control.

Court Caseo Bias?o Procedural fairness

Onus on the applicant to put evidence to visa officer – who then assesses claim based on this.

But - Must give applicant opportunity to respond to specific considerations Where expectations are created – opportunity to respond to/address this

o Reasonableness of findings based on his ability to support himself

Overlap of criminal/political purpose; Something is “Political” if there is:

(i) a political disturbance related to a struggle to modify or abolish either a government or a government policy; and(ii) a rational nexus between the crime committed and the potential accomplishment of the political objective sought

Balance seriousness of crime against repressiveness of regime (Gil; Malouf)

Exclusion clause 1F(a) Serious reasons for considering they have committed a crime against peace, a war crime, or

a crime against humanity, as defined in international instruments in respect of such crimeso “Limited and brutal purpose” or “personal and knowing participation or toleration” o Acts coded as criminal in Canada since IRPA has been passed.

Sivakumar – excluded for PKP, responsible for acts based on close assc. Complicity arising out of mere membership or association [difficulty] Moreno (Remerez)

o A kid forcibly recruited in Salvadorian armyo Met the definition of Refugee otherwiseo He himself wasn’t responsible for any atrocities, but stood by while torture and

mutilation occurred with interrogation; didn’t say anything out of fearo Leave of absence, and went back, participated in campaign against guerilla forceso Mere fact of membership or association amount to complicity? No, but narrow

circumstance where it is enough, irrespective of personal participation, where the premise of the organization is to engage in crimes against humanity – “Limited and brutal purpose”

o Or must have “personal and knowing participation or toleration” – Difference between innocent bystander and accomplice – forcible recruitment, and wasn’t reasonable for him to step him – mixed fact and law (mens rea)

o Ramerez – was personal knowing/toleration, 20 months as an active an knowing member of the military forces who frequently engaged in the horrific acts; integral, albeit reluctant part of the enterprise producing terrible moments of collectively deliberate inhumanity (P. 625); distinguish based on time, rank, passiveness of role ~ crime committed clearly by ranking officers

←← Exclusion Clause 1f(c)

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Serious reasons for considering that persons have been guilty of acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations

Pushpanathano Drug trafficker – member of group trafficking heroin (Street value of 10 mil)o During a time of UN reporting heavy against the evils of drug trafficking – SCC didn’t

think this supported the purposes and principles of UNo Idea of being deserving, v. nature of acts which make them undeservingo Defines two kinds of acts contrary to purposes of UN

Acts recognized explicitly as contrary to purposes and principles of the UN (eg. terrorism, hostage taking)

Actions which deny humans dignity in any way, and the sustained or systemic denial of core human rights – set the boundaries of the convention refugee def’n

When the tables turn on persecutors, who suddenly become the persecuted, cannot claim refugee status

Purpose of (c) - Excludes those individuals responsible for serious sustained or systemic violations of fundamental human rights which amount to persecution in a non-war setting (counter-point to 1F - Focusing on criminals)

o Includes persons in a position of power, could be isolated violations, or complicityo Drug trafficking though condemned – doesn’t strike at this coreo [73] Criminality is dealt with 1Fb generally meant to prevent entry of ordinary criminals

to state of asylum.←← Exclusion clause 1F(b)

Serious reasons for considering they have committed a serious, non-political crime outside of country of refuge prior to admission as a refugee

JayasekaraDrug trafficker, 8 mo, probation and came to Canada

Started as a case on deportation then - Moved to ‘did you complete your sentence? How is claim perceived where x

completed the sentence for their crime? Then - Moved to 1fb purpose - to prevent person from being a fugitive from

justice/avoid providing a safe haven for such/ or to protect/exclude serious criminals from Canadian territory?

Purposes as complementary, but move towards the later, though treaty was signed for the former

How does one determine whether a crime is “serious” UNHCR – International, not domestic standards: nature of the act, actual harm inflicted,

procedure used to prosecute the crime, nature of penalty, crime under most jurisdictions?o [37] Nature of prosecution and penalty, but not considered in isolation - more multi-

faceted approach.. Chano [55] Gravity of offense in place (NY), facts underlying conviction, nature of substance

and how much, Canadian perspective (10 years or more), bad conduct post-sentencing (refusal to report to probation officer, resulting in deportation)

Serving a sentence doesn’t allow of to avoid application of 1f(b)

← PERSON IN NEED OF PROTECTION, S. 97 Risk to life or cruel/unusual treatment/punishment

S. 97. (1) A person in need of protection is a person in Canada whose removal to their country(ies) of nationality or, (of don’t have) their country of former habitual residence, would subject them personally:

(a) to a danger, believed on substantial grounds to exist, of torture w/i the meaning of Art 1 of the Conv Against Torture (state persecution)

(b) to a risk to their life or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment if o (i) the person is unable or, because of that risk, unwilling to avail themself of the

protection of that country,o (ii) the risk would be faced by the person in every part of that country and is not faced

generally by other individuals in or from that country,o (iii) the risk is not inherent or incidental to lawful sanctions, unless imposed in disregard

of accepted international standards, and

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o (iv) the risk is not caused by the inability of that country to provide adequate health or medical care.

Expansion of protection Higher legal standard of proof – BOP, not more than a mere possibility Only an objective element Subject to exclusion clauses – s.98 File Tai-24763; P. 648 – Decision of the board

o Demonstrates how 97 fills some gaps in 96o Refugee claims had to show a nexus to grounds for claims; bad person via the state that

will harm me, didn’t nec. fall within 97o Higher legal standard of proof - BOP; Objective fearo + Stand alone objective evidence…o Subject to the s. 98 exclusions (96 and 97)

←← Problems – p. 651-654

Class 19 – Mar 20PRRA AND HUMANITARIAN ADMISSIONS← Under s. 34(2) of the IRPA, the Minister has discretion to set aside a determination of inadmissibility for security reasons under s. 34(1) where the applicant “satisfies the Minister that their presence in Canada would not be detrimental to the national interest”.

PRE-REMOVAL RISK ASSESSMENT May result in refugee protection or statutory stay of removal New to IRPA s. 112-115 To apply - Must have an enforceable removal order or security certificate against you

o Notified when removable ready, to apply for a PRRAo Subject for Federal Court to review certificate – on the eve of removalo Exist because S. 7 Charter right engaged? Suresh – Maybe certain removals can’t take

placeo Some people can become Refugees (since they were first assessed)

Right to judicial review- gives time to go through appeal + 30 days to effect their own removal circumstances can change during this time fundamentally unfair not to do a pre-removal risk assessment?

Certain persons cannot applyo Safe 3rd Country can’t applyo Extradition proceedings (past a certain point) – must have authority to proceedo 112(2)

PRRA Application and Stay Reg 160 applies upon Notification by CBSA

o Trigger to apply for PRRA 15 day and 30 day time limits (for application and submissions)

o Application received after 15 days will not result in a stay Legislative stay of removal (under) s. 232 while 1st application is pending (IAD may cancel or

change conditions at any time)o Exceptions ss. 165, 166o X Individuals who are making a second PRRAo X Applications made at the port of entry

←Requirements for PRRA

s. 113, Consideration for an application shall be as follows: Require new evidence if been before RPD already (s. 113(a); Raza)

o PRRA not used to challenge IRB decision, so require +o Practice is to present all old evidence plus new stuffo Never know what will be consideredo As a mater of practice (Van) – assessment looks at everything because don’t want to

send back with risk (v. Toronto, actively rejects old evidence)

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Account for if (CIC Guidelines):o the harm feared is not severe, is not generalized, is not objectively supported, or is the

law of general application, lawfully imposed fitting international standardso there is effective State protection; o there is a reasonable Internal Flight Alternative (safe area within the applicant’s country

of origin) or multiple nationalities. Raza

o Applicant would put in corroborative evidence (from sister), statutory declarationso Post-date RPD hearing, but all the events describing, were knows at the RPD hearingo 1) IS the evidence credible?o 2) Relevant? Capable of proving or disproving a fact relevanto 3) New –

Prove the current state of affairs in the country of removal (right now) OR evidence towards the circumstance which occurred or arose after the hearing OR was unknown to the claimant at the time of the hearing (doesn’t help) Contradiction… including a …

o 4) Materialityo 5) Statutory requirement [113(a)]

Not always a right to a hearing (s. 113(b), reg. 167) – on Papero Legislation states explicitly, so no procedural claimso Minister is, on the basis of prescribed factors of the opinion that a hearing should be held

*Get hearing if something might come up during the hearing which could help you Whether evidence raises a serious question of applicant’s credibility ~ related to risk

grounds Whether evidence is central to the decision Evidence, if accepted, would justify to..

o Hearing is just an interview with the applicanto Cerilo – Burdens – Risk Claims, no right to a hearing if the central issue is one of

sufficiency of evidence, over credibilityo Ferguson 2008 – About credibility (lawyer’s submissions not sufficient, rather than the

applicant themselves) Assessment generally based on ss. 96, 97 and 98 (96, more than a mere possibility)

o Consider 96, 97 and exclusions in 98o Reach a decision of Yay or nay

Exceptions in certain cases…o Get a limited PRRA in cases of serious inadmissibility (eg. serious criminality) or because

they’ve previously been excluded by the Board under Article 1F (s. 113d), or o Balancing PRRAo consideration shall be on the basis of factors set out in s. 97 (not protected from mere

prosecution, as in 96) S. 97 Torture, life, treatment or ___ punishment BOP burden (Danger to a public in Canada? Against sanction risk to person) Nature of protection offered is much more limited (to what SCC help in Suresh)

o Lye - badly wanted by Chinese authorities for smuggling May be tortured, jailed, executed – wrongfully prosecuted Excluded on the basis of serious non-corporal crime PRRA on s.97, balance – nature and severity of the acts they committed, irrespective

of the danger.. (risk to security)o Difficulties

Can you ever accept assurances from state? Nature of the criminal process – must meet certain standards (absence of political

involvement, unbiased adjudicator)?… and if not, does this breach standard of fair trial?

May be vacated if misrepresentation (s. 114) Vagra v. MCI

o H&C factors in the PRRA? Assess risk to Canadian born children and impact in the foreign national’s PRRA?

o No obligation where removing at least one parent

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o PRRA is to assess risk to the FN being removed, not the childo H&C is different- Undue, undeserved and disproportionate hardship – 2 processes should

not be confused or duplicatedo Best interest of the child isn’t explicit is the section – Important, but not all pervasive –

compartmentalized - can still make a s. 25 claim

HUMANITARIAN ADMISSIONS, S. 25 Objectives of these provisions * exists as a pressure valve

o Can’t have hard and fast rules because (at one point will be constitutional, so want discretionary power)

Discretionary decision-makingo May be nice to have discretionary power with the exec, rather than the judiciary or

somewhere else (delegated) Nature of Reviews Relationship with refugee protection claims/PRRA

← Key legislative Provisions S. 12 ‘humanitarian tradition’ S. 25 Centre-piece

o Obligated to consider every agency request made on request within Canada -- OR ministerial initiative Overseas – won’t process request on list of jobs for foreign workers program

o H&C includes best interest of the child or public policy (blanket exemption – eg. spousal policy exemption)

Other places in IRPA:o Sections relate to the IRB’s jurisdiction - immigration appeal division (not refugee)o Stay of removal regulatory provisions – where s. 25 exemption has been granted, person

must still be found admissible (while PR being determined, stay)o Residency rule exemption (2 yrs/5 physically present) – H&C exemption

Baker v. MCI () Reminders:

o International law Officer must consider substantive IN law, but need not go through each treaty..

o CIC Policy Guidelines (IP-5) – Processing manual guidelines Undue, undeserved or disproportionate hardship In some cases, leaving to apply may result in hardship which is ‘extra’ Personal connections, business, emotional – how establish is this person to Canada –

and what at the connections to where the application should be made?o Best interests of the child

Critical here!

Hawthorne v. MCI (judicial review) Substantive points of H&C – applies Baker Court is not to reweigh factors to take into account in an H&C decision -- Evidence which the

officer finds missing “Alert, alive and sensitive”, as opposed to dismissive of the child’s best interest

o Perspective of the child not the parento Best interest of child important to be given substantial weight, but not determinative

Query: Is reasoning to be done from perspective of “best interests” (Almost always will be better to remain with parent - standard of living, child’s familiarity is always here) – or “hardship”? o Compare to custody best interesto Look at evidence as to where child would goo Unusual and underserved or disproportionate hardshipo Not a magic formula though

←← Legault v. MCI

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D Had repeatedly flouted immigration laws, and had criminality Balancing these factors of the Claimant against the best interest of the child was found to be

okay. Best interests of the child not paramount (again) Weighing of factors left to officer Factors may include policy considerations re: non-compliance with immigration law

Class 20 - Mar 25 09

TOPIC FOUR – KEEPING PEOPLE OUT

INADMISSABILITY TO CANADA AND REMOVAL ORDERS Is Admissibility it about entry or expulsion? Is it necessary?

o Medical/Crim – What larger public purpose does this serve? Costs? Sovereignty / coercive state power / international obligation

o Imposing rules – We do it just because we cano The way rules are implemented engages the extreme end of power (long arm) –

intuitional control, security Role of CIC v. CBSA

o Gatekeeper at visa office with denial – other enforcement Video: Lennikov

←Inadmissibility

Used to deny entry o Engaged upon examination any time anyone makes an application under the act, s. 15

and 18o Can only get PR or TR status if:

you apply (can then be investigated) Hold a Visa; and Not inadmissible (changes burden of proof to crown?)

o Grounds of inadmissibility: s. 33-43; Reg. 14-24o S.24(1) allows for granting of a temporary permit to those otherwise considered

inadmissibleo A person may make an application to be permitted on H&C grounds

And to remove status of FN and PRso Engaged upon investigationo CBSA has an investigation branch – particular to investigate PR (Subject to criminal

proceedings?) Refugee – without a visa, will be held inadmissible, however any removal order is

conditional, and only comes into force after the person is found ineligible

Loss of status, s. 44(1) (2) and 45** (subject to a lot of caselaw) (1) Immigration Officer can prepare a report setting out relevant facts (para) – if of the

opinion that they’re inadmissible (bone fide, good faith – but not objective nec.) (2) Report is then referred to the Minister for Public Safety and immigration (delegates),

who form an opinion on whether report is well foundedo Procedural fairness engaged + opportunity to respond

Orderso 1) Depending on nature of inadmissibility – may be able to make removal order

themselves [FN, or s.28 direct removal order) Where delegate can’t make order themselves, ID can make removal order

o OR 2) Refers to Immigration Division – Independent tribunal for decision to determine admissibility

Potential right of appeal to Immigration Appeal Division At any level, once end of line is reached, always have right of judicial review

←← Immigration Division Appeals on Loss of Status

S.44 Report + Minister’s referral ID

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o Only looking at - admissible, or inadmissible? o ID might have (limited) H&C… maybe; o IRPA, s. 34-37 grounds definedo IRPA, s. 33 interpretation

Removal orderso s.46 PR lose status when removal order against them comes info forceo Enforced and enforceable (PRRA)

Right of appeal?o IAD has Special Humanitarian & Compassionate jurisdiction! (Ribic factors)o PRs and Protected Persons can appeal ID order under s. 63 to IAD of IRB

FN, x Protected person – can’t appeal. S. 64 Exception: No appeal right IF - founded to be inadmissible on grounds of

security, violating human or international rights, or organized criminality, serious criminality.

serious criminality (with respect to a crime that was punished in Canada by a term of imprisonment of at least 2 years); Criminal charge, settle for 2 years – unaware of immigration consequences. IA can’t hear appeal.

+ certain misrep – No appeal (of FN sponsor X given PR visa) if inadmissibility on ground of misrep, unless the FN in Q is the sponsor’s spouse, common-law partner or child.

o Appeal board can allow or dismiss the appeal, or based on H&C issue a stay Court should give a broad interpretation to H&C including consequences upon return

←← S. 33 – Facts to interpret

s. 33 In interpreting inadmissibility include - acts and omissions + (threshold) reasonable grounds to believe have occurred are occurring or may occuro Included members of organization, subsequent to their membership became involved in

organized criminality – point in time = serious implication Reasonable grounds to believe – Mugesara

o Evidentiary standardo More than mere suspicion, but less than the BOPo Same as serious reasons (last class) - maybe similar to refugee too.o SCC requires this standard reflect the level of extraordinary condemnation of crimes

against humanity – while s. 33 adopts this standard as default←Security, s. 34

both permanent residents and foreign nationalso espionage or subversion against democratic govt.o subversion by force of any govt.o terrorismo danger to the security of Canadao violence that would/might endanger lives/safety in Canadao member of an organization linked to a, b, co IRB or Canadian Court finding conclusive re: terrorism (IRP Reg. s.14)

Reg 14 – 16 – determinations by IRB, ICC or Canadian court of involvment in terroism, war crime or crimes against humanity shall be conclusive

s.34(2) Ministerial relief – if satisfied person’s presence in Canada would not be detrimental to Canada’s interesto Reviewable decisions (minister can’t say, I won’t grant descretion because excluded,

circular – must properly address legal iddues)o Soe – Criteria

Eg. Galloway MP, financial support to org, couldn’t give speech in To/

← Questions← What is ‘Terrorism’ (Suresh)

Never committed an act of terrorism – ‘Liberation’ fights Was a key fundraiser, Charter issue as a refugee

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Word is so unclear, it’s mere use is not enough, over-broad (to engage on charter rights) – academic backing

SCC x ill-defined over vague Potentially ambiguous and open to interpretation at the grey fringes – but LTE had engaged

in physical acts of violence against citizens (no Q) o but what about financing another org?

*Def’n not so vague as to be utterly unworkable with litigation (decided on after 9/11) Refer to international conventions with defn’s – for the suppression of financing of terr Any [other] act intended to cause death or serious bodily injury to a civilian, or to any other

person not taking an active part in the hostilities in a situation of armed conflict, when the purpose of such act, by its nature or context, is to intimidate a population, or to compel a government or an international organization to do or to abstain from doing any act

← What Involvement is sufficient Not parliament’s intention to capture those who innocently contribute to or become

members.. captured where minister is “satisfied their admission would not be detrimental to the national interest”

But mere membership (broad) is worded Reconcile this by Granting exceptions to claimants who didn’t know – ministerial relief

o Problem with executive discretion – is the discretionary natureo Can be unfair, and informed of political assumptions, rather than informed by facts

← Who is a ‘member’ (Poshteh) Joined as teen – MEK – solely disseminating propaganda (important act in the org); called

himself a member (but denied formal membership, largely because of age) and shared goals of orgo Significant?

How should the issue of age be dealt with – didn’t matter.o Not workable to say no minor will ever be inadmissible on security groundso Exception for criminal inadmiss. ~ so telling of not for security groundso Don’t ignore age – but go to the substance [47] Relevant considerations – minor has

requisite knowledge or mental capacity to understand the nature and consq of his actions

o Was not ignorant, became involved voluntarily, and against the advice of adultso …would be hard to find for young childreno + Ministerial relief can follow.

If not this - From the perspective of how integrated he was with the organization (!) Denied appeal – no definition of member, not precise or exhaustive definition – but to be

given an unrestricted an broad definition (like terrorism – here, membership across the board)

← Critique (S. Aiken article) Broad discretion on terrorism in IRPA leaves opportunity for xenophobic prejudices/sterotypes

to inform admin and judic. decision making.. Shortcomings – Enormous delay for outcome of security determination

o Inadmissible on security can render ineligible PR – big deal for those in Canada, in limboo ‘But don’t worry we won’t deport you’... what’s the point?

Guilt by associationo Innocent involvement – q of how does relief plays outo Crimes against humanity – require commission of the crimeo Terrorism – don’t need personal and knowing involvemento Broad definition of membership – threshold – little involvement and no formal

membership may well be caughto Seem to run contrary to broad human rights readings

Should be broad relief, small involvement Might be counter-productive

o Discourages individuals from coming to Canada and settling, joining organizations to get support ~

o movements in community support involved in financing? Another q. SIS – investigative role, provide to IRPA people.

Class 21 – Mar 27

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Inadmissibility cont.

← Human Rights Violators (IRPA, s.35)Permanent Residents and Foreign Nationals (a) acts outside Canada that would contravene Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act (b) prescribed senior official of governments engaged in terrorism, human rights violations,

genocide, war crimes (c) a person (non PR) who is restricted because of internationally agreed sanctions S.35(2) Ministerial relief available re: b and c (not detrimental to national interest)

← Mugesera Speech Appeals to IED (pre-IRPA; wouldn’t be an appeal here now); JR and then Federal appeal – not

crime again humanity? Distinction between crimes against humanity v. ordinary crimes

o Based on criminal code v. IN Lawo Rises to CAH with 4 elements

An enumerated proscribed act was committed (involves showing accused committed the criminal act and had the requisite guilty state of mind for the underlying act)

Counseling for an act is sufficient - Act must have occurred Includes Persecution - the gross or blatant denial of a fundamental right on

discriminatory grounds – guilty mental state is discriminatory intent to deny the right

Speech that incites hatred and persecution may be included (is here) Acting done as part of a widespread or systematic attack Action is directly against any civilian population or any identifiable person Person knew of the acts and know or took the risk that their act compromised a part

of that attacko X for refugee claim – balances risk assessment

←← Criminality – Serious, other, organized crime

s. 36(3)- after prescribed period an individual may be deemed rehabilitated S. 17 - 18.1 – details of whose covered Doesn’t address considerations of foreign pardons ()

← Serious Criminality, s.36(1), 3(3)Foreign Nationals and Permanent Residents

SC - Not the same as those who don’t get an appeal… other def’n 1) Conviction in Canada (max 10 yrs or more OR actual 6 mos in prison (not Contraventions

Act or YOA (YCJA)) 2) Conviction elsewhere = max 10 years or more here

o IRPA officer determines equivalent (Or for refugee – board) 3) acts elsewhere = offences of max of 10 yrs +, on BOP Regs are key here (include rehabilitation*)

o S.18 – Gap between ability to get a pardon here, or elsewhere

← Other Criminality (General) s.36(2), 36(3)FN Only (– lower possible threshold)

One indictable offence conviction in Canada or any two conviction from different events (hybrid rule)

Parallel for outside Canada convictions Acts which are an offence where committed and are an indictable offence in Canada Transborder offence (listed Acts)

←← Some equivalent criminality issues← Li

Convicted in Hong Kong under two convention of bribery 4 years imprisonment – high profile Is he inadmissible under general criminality? 36(2) Offence requires equivalence, compare essential elements – unsure about inclusion of

defenses here:

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o What if there’s different burden’s of proof under two judicial systemso Doesn’t matter - What matters is the substance of the act under this provision (or key

elements)o Must determine essential elements of each action corresponding – fundamental test is

would the acts committed abroad and punished there be punishable here. ~ comparing offenses, not possible convictions, but does account for elements and defences of crime (if criteria are manifesting to commission) So committed? Punished here. Defenses matter - but technical doesn’t overcome

substantive (what actually happened!)o BYRD - Lower burden? Charter equivalent process? No – doesn’t speak to the substantive

point; o threshold – are there serious grounds for belief? Of these substantive facts having

occurred.Saini

Pardon – hijacking, no questions, convictions in Pakistan Sentenced to death, then released and got a pardon Vergon – UK pardon recognized and not found to be criminally inadmissible Need more than a doc saying ‘pardon’ – gotta assess this p/695? To summarize Jurisprudence required all 3 elements

o Legal system sufficiently similar as a whole to Canada Though Pakistan was a CW system, but no suff.

o Content and effect similar to Canadian law Not sure how you get the pardon there – no evidence to suggest of a process if Pak –

just buy? Does it actually has a consq of deleting the conviction – or can it still be re-instated? (Must accept it would delete the offence)

o Must be no valid reason not to recognize the effect of foreign law Yes – because such a grave offense

None of these were satisfied – Difficult test to apply (no certainty)←← Organized criminality, s. 37← PR and FN

Deemed to be organized crime: a) Being a member of an organization believed on reasonable grounds to be engaged… +

can be inside or outside Canadao Members, defined broadly (significant associated auto incl.)o Trafficked or smuggled …

b) Engaging in activities such as people smuggling, trafficking in persons, or money laundering…all in the context of transnational crime

S.37(2) Exception:o provision for ministerial relief (not detrimental to national interest) o and persons who were trafficked or smuggledo exception indicates how broad this really is

← Chiau TV Star, p. 704 analysis, under K with TVB (Triat controlled) – Organized criminality

o Not actually engaged in criminal activity – association (= member) What about confidential information?

o Information given from a state in confidence – unfair for visa officer to rely on thiso Full Baker analysis hereo Not unfair - C knew of the allegations and substance of deciding factors against himo There’s significant public interest in this case – in not disclosing the information

Compare with Charkowi – need to disclose information (at least to some advocate) o Different setting application for visa v. security concerns

S.86-87 – Dealing with confidential information in ID, IAD and Federal Courto Special advocate processo But still norm – for officers under this situation

(Reasonable grounds bottom 306 x true anymore) Sittam Palam (?)

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← Excessive demand – Health conditions, s. 38 FN only – Don’t deport PR on this basis, X protected persons Applies to all – but practically, TR visa’s don’t have to undergo medical exam (only PR

applicants); s.15 and r.30 FN may have to. 3 categories, “likelihood” of:

o Danger to public health, danger to public safety (commutable diseases)o Reasonably expected to cause excessive demand on health or social services (court has

overturned visa decision on ‘possibility, Hiramen’o Exceptions to demand, s. 38(2): spouse, CL, children of the family class, convention

refugees, protected persons (accompanying family members are not exempted); see also Reg., 24

S.1 Defined: ‘excessive demand’ ‘health services’ and ‘social services’o Excessive ‘demand’

greater than average costs per capita in next five years (unless evidence that costs likely to be greater later); or

add to waiting lists in such a way that morbidity and mortality in Canada would be increased due to denial or delay

Medical – What larger public purpose does this serve? (Undue burden on services – is this counter productive though?)o May discriminate against more expensive conditions not caught by testing, stigmatizes

immigrants and non-citizens (HIV/AIDS ~ larger proportion in Africa), costs of testing may outweigh gains, done in other countries and may use lower standards

Questions Is ‘excessive demand’ about cost or about availability? (Deol) ~ both What if the applicant is willing to forego or pay for the services? (Deol, Hilewitz)

o Only possible for social service, because a right exists to medical; private service coesxist with public

What if the services are only available in certain provinces? (Hilewitz)←← Deol/Leg Medical services

PR sought to sponsor father, mother, sister and 2 brothers All Refused because father was inadmissible (1=all) Knee surgery required Right of appeal – unsuccessful; JR dismissed Excessive demands - How much it costs or waiting lists? Both What if applicant will afford services or forgo them

o Insurance etc.o Couldn’t waive his right of access in the futureo Entitled to service as a PR

← Hilewitz Social Services Investor from SA – Son who was intellectually disabled Started a school in SA for developmental disabilities Had never made use of public funds for his son – enrolled in a private school in On; job lined

up etc.o Visa officer turned down because of the excessive demand possibly createdo Court lined to ability to pay - BOP on whether he would actually make and excessive

demand – probably he would go bankrupt – so smallo Individualized assessment

Medical services – can’t obtain privately (though may change) – whereas social services very different from province to province

Hil. Based on health conditions and development disabilities – moved from categorical – to individualized assessment. Not enough to say you could get the services to fee – must assess actual and willingness to pay

Gov: for a long time held financial consideration/exemptions only applied to investor cases based on the net balance of contribution – Court said no - all (dissent J, Deschamps held inappropriate to mere considerations of these classes - only apples to business or economic applicants ~ should be left to minister descretion otherwise).

What if only availability in certain provinces – can’t restrict movement in provinces – Look at evidence in the individual case to see what the likelihood is.

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p. 685←← Financial Reasons, s. 39← Only to FN, x PP

Drain on welfare state Persons who are/will be unable or unwilling to support themselves or dependents AND have

no other adequate arrangements, other than social assistance Protected persons are exempt (IRP Reg., s.21) Generally, sponsor is required to meet an income standard (reg 133(l)(j))– but is some cases

where the sponsoree is a spouse, CL or Conj partner or a dependent child, the sponsor is exempt (reg.133(3) ~ but may still be inadmissible here.

←← Misrepresentation, s. 40

PR and FN All relate to abuse of the immigration system More in last few years (unsure why)

o direct or indirect misrepresentation or witholding material facts relating to a relevant matter that induces or could induce an IRPA error; or

o having been sponsored by such a person; or Minister must be satisfied inadmissibility here is justified

o vacation of refugee protection; oro citizenship revocation

Must be a relevant mattero Could lead to a line of inquiry, which could lead to a material findings with respect to the

application in finding Inadmissibility Lasts for 2 years (is an inadmissibility ever forever…? This goes away on it’s

own terms; maybe because this could be forever) Exemption for protected persons and refugee protection claimants (IRP Reg., s.22)

←← Non-compliance with IRPA (S.41)

FN - any act or omission which contravenes IRPA, directly or indirectly PR - Failure to comply with s. 27 conditions or s.28 residency obligations

←← Family Members, s.42

FN only, x PP If accompanying family member is inadmissible - inadmissible

o But can’t bring one person if the other is inadmissibleo Fills a gap – To Avoid loophole of one person coming, and then sponsoring someone who

is inadmissible Also inadmissible if non-accompanying family member is inadmissible, in prescribed

circumstances (Not included in application) o IRP Reg., s.23: PR applicants only AND close family

←← Class 22 - April 01, 2009← Human Trafficking presentation [John Ferguson], ss. 117-121← [As relates to Refugee Protection/Immg Enforcement]

Human Trafficking – many international commitments Characterization of innocent victims as counter-productive to enforcement and protection

(not ‘pure’, but still exploited) Prosecution of perpetrators

o Lacking – even though victims increasingly brought forwardo 3 offenses created in 05, difficult to bring claim under: human trafficking, material

benefit from the commission of trafficking and withholding or destroying documents to facilitating trafficking

o convictions under this offence have involved domestic victimso Relevant: Kidnapping, Forcible confinement, Extortion, Intimidation, Assault, Causing

death or bodily harm by criminal negligence, Homicide, Sexual assault, Uttering threats, Conspiracy, s. 465) + Prostitution-related offences, Child abduction (non-parental), Child pornography, Organized crime provisions.

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**R. v. Ng, 2008 BCCA 535, the BCCA decided to increase Ng’s sentence by 1 yr, to total of 27 mnths. o While acquitted on human trafficking charges under IRPA on evidentiary grounds, his

sentence for prostitution-related convictions under the Code was found to be inadequate. [took sexual exploitation more seriously here]

o Justice: Deterrence & denunciation are significant b/ of the moral turpitude involved - The sentences imposed for the prostitution offences do not adequately speak to these factors and are unfit.

←← Perrin – policy article

Recent legal and policy measures designed to protect victims, prosecute traffickers and prevent this serious crime and human rights violation.

Victim Protection - May 06, CIC introduced measures to protect victims by:o providing them with temporary residence permits + guidelines specifically addressed to the

problem, o access to interim federal healthcare. o increased the initial period for the TRs to 180 days + ability to obtain a work permit. o But - require a range of support services, incl. healthcare and counseling, housing, income or

employment support, legal aid and translation services (provincial responsibility). Only half have established relevant agencies

2006 - 2008 - at least 31 FN reported as potential human trafficking victims [fraction of existing - to threats, violence or coercion; + domestic]. o Romania, the Philippines, Moldova and China were the top four source

Border official ought to proactively prevent the movement of suspected victims from these countries to Canada. Migration integrity officers should be more active in these jurisdictions to identify fraudulent documents, bogus offers of employment and the other indicators of suspected trafficking cases.

o Only a handful of TR apps had legal council; 12 granted, 7 not, 1 cancelled + 1 did not appear, 10 pending or obtained other immigration status.

Immigration relief introduced as a ministerial policy measure to provide necessary flexibility - such measures should be legislated in IRPA and related regulations once “lessons learned” have been incorporated (for permanency)

Uphold promise to newcomers!←← V.O.G. (Re), [2006] R.P.D.D. No. 7 (QL)←← C. Dauvergne Ch 5 “Trafficking in Hegemony” ← “Remedies: sovereignty, law, and refuge”

Crackdown of legal migration (sov) expands trafficking market – treated as perpetrators and sent home

TR’s specifically linked to trafficking prosecutions Protections reinforces global structure of migration laws/probs

o focus on persecution, o human rights remedy needed (remedy of status hinges on prosecution over harm)o reinforces choice for trafficking as a migration path (cmplex for victims), states maintain

control by linking this to persecution/assisting state [where trafficking represents a loss of this control]

o PR would be an unacceptable surrender of sovereignty – but would end a the power dynamic of fear for those trafficking, more prosecution, stop recurring trafficking; more willing to participate (but many more? Horrific, not voluntary); PR as a remedy in the way TR is not

o *Refugee Law (remedy, not solution) Meet nexus in many ways Problem: Forward looking (persecution upon return? Recurring trafficking; organized

crime threats to them or family); state protection – Generally summed to protect (need not be perfect), but couldn’t here; individuals (not similarly situated persons, must be unique)

Nothing to reduce market problem – no right to cross border; retains this prob of border control as a feature of the market

o Multifaceted approach required..← “Smuggling, undrawing lines and concluding”

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Victims v. none; but victim identity is silenced and obscure guilt and criminality often hard to separate clear line makes grey harder to distinguish –

must think more about actual characteristics of victimization (hard for law - likey clear lines) ~ leads to degrees, of agency and consent; inclusion and exclusion

But the two parallel (hence incentives of PR as problematic) Clear lines help - Us v. them, again, pinned to economic logic – victimization (rights bearing

indv.) or illegality.←← Class 23 – April 03 2009← Removal and Detention

What, when, why? Gibney and Hansen - Much more important from a theoretical perspective – operational

reality in much less Liberal principles: Deportation is the most problematic of capacity, forcible expulsion

required the full power of a state against an individual.. only capital punishment surpasses.. removing individuals from communities in which they remain, severing all their ties.. even if concede as needed, no denying the hardship brought on

Given it’s unpopularity and the constraints, why do states both at all? States need to further them myth that it can actually remove all criminal non-citizens or legal

migrants; no states will collapse the principle of illegal and legals – sovereignty and control of the broader.

←← Removal Orders s.48 49,

Initiated by IRPA s. 44 process (foreign national/ PR/ AND Inadmissible 3 kinds: reg 223- 226 (difference of authorization to return to Canada)

o Departure [30 days, or deport] – exclusion [2 yr] – deportation [written authorization] – details in reg 229

o Reg 227 – removal order against a FN is also a removal order against family memberso No complete outright prohibition from return – like H&C balancing of factors by officero s. 52 Need authorization to return to Canada (Sahakyan)

s. 49 – When a removal order comes into force In force and enforceable

o Comes into force when all rights of appeal (X JR) have been exhausted o Refugee exception – not enforceable till after JRo When in force, may or may not be enforceable

Only if it’s not otherwise stayed Minister for public safety required to excerise as soon as it’s actually enforceable

Stay of removal s. 48o Reg 232 – while PRRA is pendingo Federal court order – but court’s can issue an indefinite stay (reg 231 ~ doesn’t apply

where no credible basis to a refugee claim, or serious criminality)o S. 50 – 5 cases – sentences to term of imprisonment reg 230 generalized risk to entire

population from armed conflict, environmental disaster or other. o Reg. 233 where minister is of the opinion that H&C consideration exists, where applied

for (effective until PR determination) Pancharatnam (Herring) P.736

o Diabetic, poor eyesight, daughter in law administers insulino Refugee, JR, PRRA – all rejected – H&C pendingo Return to Sri Lanka – valid removal ordero Officer refused request to stay removal order pending H&C – but can only do this

pending some underlying JR application of her caseo Test for stay:

Serious issue of JR application (less than a prima facie case, but more than just to get stay)

*irreparable harm (not just resettlement itself - Life will be at risk (same harm all along)

Balance of convenience Strong public interest in enforcing deportation

o Didn’t get stay

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Formal “Detention”, s. 54-61, Reg. ss.224-250 Power to arrested and detained (jail) FNs and PRs under IRPA, even for quite a long time –

2 yrs filing various immigration applications – but never convicted of anything This is different and separate from any criminal detention

o On/Qc – have immigration specific detention centerso Med/max security, no time to do a proper assessment because assumed it will be short

termo 464 in immigration detention – thousands without status – detention is the exception

rather than the rule (maybe because bad conditions)o 72% in On, 20% Qc, 5% BC Yukon

Security Certificate detention provisions s.82-86 (bill C-3 amendment)o UN review, concern over detainees’ right to a fair hearing, judicial review, to challenge

evidence used against them and not to incriminate themselves, Detention is a last resort re: minor children

←← Process, s. 55

Arrest can take place under IRPA – officero Without a warrant if reasons to be inadmissible and either

i) Danger to the public ii) Or unlikely to appear from a process

o FN (not protected) – also if officer is not satisfied of Identity on entry o PRs and FNs - detained if necessary to complete an examination, OR reasons grounds to

believe they’re inadmissible for security reasons or rights violations Security of people in Canada, IN obligation to create a safe haven for fugitives from justice

(IN/home state) Immigration division must be notified upon detention – subject to regular review S.55 – can release with or w/o conditions

←← Detention review, s. 57-58

Mandatory review - after 48 hours, then 7 days, then every 30 days ID can release, or continue detention

o ID shall release unless (taking into account prescribed factors):(i) danger to public;(ii) unlikely to appear;(iii) Minister is reasonably inquiring into serious inadmissibility; (iv) OR - Identity is an issue

Can impose new conditionso Impose bond, agree to live in a certain place, report etc. (Charkoui)

Change of decisiono Bond comes up, response to security concerns, new evidence etc.

ID does not review security certificate cases (Federal Court does)←← Prescribed factors

re: Flight risk, R 245o fugitive from foreign jurisdiction re: a crime under Canadian lawo previous voluntary compliance with immigration related matterso previous avoidance of immigration examination or escape from custodyo involvement with smuggling or trafficking that would likely to lead the person not to

appearo strong ties to a community in Canada

re: Danger to the public, R. 246o Minister’s danger opinion under other sections of IRPAo association with a criminal organizationo engagement in people smuggling or traffickingo conviction in Canada of violent offence or serious drug offenceo conviction, or pending charges, outside Canada for violent offence or serious drug

offence

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re: Identity, R 247o cooperation in providing relevant identity details (not applicable to children)o if a refugee claimant, possibility of obtaining identity documents without alerting foreign

governmento destruction of documents or use of fraudulent documents to mislead CIC/CBSA (and

circumstances of this)o provision of contradictory information in an immigration applicationo existence of documents which contradict the person’s claims re: identity

re: Every case, R. 248o When is detention a charter violation? Contrary to PFJ o S.248 codified Sahin factorso reason for detentiono total time in detention, including likely future time o unexplained delays or lack of CIC/CBSA diligenceo alternatives to detention

R.249 special factors re: children←← Charkaoui 2007 SCC - security certificate + detention review; s. 33, 77-85

Principles with when detention is a charter violation - same irrespective of security certificate context v. other (immigration review flawed)

Contrary to Chartero reliance on confidential information to which person concerned does not have adequate

opportunity to respond violates s.7 Chartero Right to prompt review – detention of FN w/o timely review violates s. 9 and 10

Chartero Standards for detention must be rationally connected to purpose of detentiono X s.15 citizens couldn’t be detained arbitrarily (HL – some success, SC – very prime is

different treatment of FN and residents)o 87 IRPA's procedures for determining whether a certificate is reasonable and for

detention review cannot be justified as minimal impairments of the individual's right to a judicial determination on the facts and the law and right to know and meet the case. Other ex’s demonstrate gov’t can do more to protect the individual while keeping critical info confidential - clear more must be done to meet the requirements of a free and democratic society.

S.52 – invalid – a year for amendments – madeo Released to house arrest on extremely strict conditions (p. 772) ~ worseo Zhang (Casebook, p. 779) Release conditions

Sahin factors reinforced and explained re: extended detentiono lengthy detention with no end in sight (fixed end year) – difficult to contemplate when

removal could be effected + risk of torture – process before removal could take place> MCI v. Li 2009 FCAo *Extended periods of detention are not necessarily contrary to the Chartero so long as they are “accompanied by a process that provides regular opportunities” for

“judicial review of the continued need for and justice” of the detentiono Li: Not contrary where person is simply exercising all their rights to remain in Canada

(Crown making every effort to expedite the process)←← Almrei, Harkat and Jaballah

o involved heavy restrictions on movement, electronic surveillance, large bailo In contrast, rather than exclude certain people from communications as in Charkaoui,

put a blanket ban on communication with any individuals other than those designated o The conditions also provided for interception of all written and telephone

communications of all members of the household. In Jaballah the court went so far as to specify procedure in the event that, while on an outing, Mr. Jaballah’s supervisor needs to use a public restroom (he is to stay as close as reasonably possible).

←←← Deghani 1993 SCC

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When is an immigration “interview” really “detention” under section 10(b) of the Charter of Rights?o Right to council for detention, not interview

Interview – removal order issued, should have had council? See also: Kainth v. Canada (M.C.I.), 2009 FC 100

← ** Exam -- incorporate factual and/or legal issue(s) raised in the JR. (mini-notebook)

Facts: Iranian musician, didn’t meet definition or have ability to earn income in intended locationo Definition of self employed persono Economic – can include cultural activities

Behaviour – Reasonable apprehension of bias (test)o Temper, cut off and told to stop speaking, rolled eyes, appeared angry officer notes

where important testimony was not included, didn’t account for international incomeo Decision maker consciously or unconsciously - Appearance alone, can amount to this

(behaviour)o Refusal to allow response, or consider relevant evidence:

Obligation to consider all relevant information Give chance to respond to concerns against him on application Not required to show this would have resulted in a different determination against

him Refusal to accept after the fact courier

o Undue focus: On income in Canada – main source in international Ability to bring culture – but not ripe for consideration Students – small part of income, undue focus here Above low-income cut-off!

o Relied on own perception of demand and cultural view Would be teaching Iranian students Compares to piano, inappropriate Large north shore Iranian community

o Speculation argument What he could and couldn’t’ do while living here 640,000 assets huge focus on housing costs – could rent, addresses officer concerns = moot Visa officer had no evidence for statements ~ could live in surrey

Officer categorically denies conducto Extensive interview noteso No indication of conflict

high threshold for bias no impression, insinuation – evidence cogent Doesn’t meet burden

o Procedural fairness Did look at docs presented, doesn’t recall exact details, but would have recorded If he’d asked for more time, she would have given > Need to ask?

o Economic viability was relevant to consideration Ability to be self-employed in Canada as a professional musician Teacher, produce and sell CD’s ~ inexperience No demonstration of earned income, bankcard doesn’t show Realistic business plan? Never had own experience with CD compilation Contacts and doing over internet was not sufficient for visa officer

o Vancouver living – was questioning hiss expectations (though wasn’t a big part)o Nothing concrete – was his onus, and he failed to meet burden of proof

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Erica Olmstead 2009 Immigration/Refugee Law 377 CAN

Held: Officer erred in failing to take into account a letter sent after the interview (breach duty of fairness) – prompted by officer doubts of his ability to settle in Canada, sent in timely fashiono Interpreter did not adequately translate his experience and expertise with specific

instruments and technical art o Reiterates this information in the letter, and approximates his net worth and estimated

100,000 annual income to settle himself and his family very well in Canadao Nothing in notes to indicate officer reviewed this letter (specifically responded to other

info, but not this letter) o Must have has ability to respond to concerns – be taken in account, specifically regarding

income.o + demand for piano was not relevant; and concern over number of concerts without

consideration of international performanceso No where does officer acknowledge international stature as musician, along with two

precious ~ broader concern that officer failed to appreciate the nature of the application, and did not approach with an open mind

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