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The conference generally has less than 30% acceptance rates for all papers and less than 5% for oral presentations. [3] [4] [5] It is managed by a rotating group of volunteers who are chosen in a public election at the Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence-Technical Community (PAMI-TC) meeting four years before the meeting. [6]
Canada's constitution is composed of several individual statutes. There are three general methods by which a statute becomes entrenched in the Constitution: Specific mention as a constitutional document in section 52(2) of the Constitution Act, 1982 (e.g., the Constitution Act, 1867).
Section 3 of the Charter provides the right to citizens of Canada to be qualified for membership in the House of Commons. In the 1996 case Harvey v New Brunswick (Attorney General), the Supreme Court of Canada held that section 3 provides the right to be a candidate and the right to sit as a member of Parliament or a legislature. [6]
Although municipalities are not mentioned by section 4, they are under the control of the provinces, which are bound by section 4. However, the court refused to accept that just because the municipal council was under the control of the legislative assembly, it could be considered a legislative assembly itself and was thus bound by section 4.
When the Charter came into force in 1982 as part of the Constitution Act, 1982, section 53 of the Constitution Act, 1982 repealed section 20 of the Constitution Act, 1867. The difference was that section 5 merely requires a sitting of Parliament at least once a year, whereas section 20 had required not only a sitting but also a session of ...
Section 34, as part of the Constitution Act, 1982, came into force on April 17, 1982. According to the government of Canada , section 34's function "simply" relates to citation. The section clarifies that the first 34 sections of the Constitution Act, 1982 may be collectively called the " Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ," which is an ...
The CMA Code of Ethics was first published in 1868, and as recently as 2015 was considered by the CMA to be "arguably the most important document produced by the CMA. It has a long and distinguished history of providing ethical guidance to Canada's physicians.
A notable case in which section 26 and the Bill of Rights were discussed is Singh v. Minister of Employment and Immigration (1985). On one of its websites, the government of Canada claims there was also a more forward-looking purpose for section 26, namely to allow non-Charter rights to continue being created.