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Home > Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms


The Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms was passed by the National Assembly of Quebec in 1975. This framework law is part of the Quebec Statutes together with other quasi-constitutional laws such as the Charter of the French Language.

1 Comparison With other Human Rights Instruments

The Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms is called quasi-constitutionnal because no provision of any other act passed by the Quebec National Assembly can derogate from its sections, unless such act expressly states that it applies despite the Charter. The complete impossibility to adopt derogating laws would be incompatible with Parliamentary sovereignty, a fundamental principle in political systems following the British tradition. The Quebec Charter is one that covers most fundamental human rights and also some important political, social, and economic rights not always protected in western democracies. The protections contained in the Charter are inspired by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The extent of the rights covered by the Quebec charter makes it one of the most progressive human rights laws in the world.

2 See also

3 External links

Canadian law Human rights

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