After Labaye: The Harm Test of Obscenity, the New Judicial Vacuum and the Relevance of Familiar Voices

26 Pages Posted: 10 Jun 2014

See all articles by Richard Jochelson

Richard Jochelson

Robson Hall, University of Manitoba Faculty of Law

Date Written: June 9, 2010

Abstract

In R. v. Labaye, the Supreme Court of Canada finally retired the community standards of tolerance test of obscenity. The test had been the subject of much academic critique, a matter that reached its zenith in the period following Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice), in which a gay and lesbian bookshop contested the procedures and legislative regime of customs officials in detaining its imports. The engagement in the literature on the efficacy of the community standards test that followed was often heated, always interesting, and ultimately unresolved. To date, we have not seen any clarifying applications of the newly proposed harm test by the Supreme Court, nor have we seen a profound articulation in any lower courts. Subsequently, the academic discussion has slowed to a crawl. In this article, the author reviews four accounts of the community standards test that were prominent following Little Sisters, and asks if the newly proposed Labaye standard meets their concerns. The Labaye case provides much fodder for the previous critics and supporters of a community standards of tolerance approach to analyze. After a critical analysis of the new Labaye test, the author concludes that the concerns have not been muted by the retirement of the community standards test, even if the voices have been. The engaged voices heard in the aftermath of Little Sisters should not hold back and they should not abandon the work to be done in obscenity law and freedom of expression discourse generally.

Keywords: Labaye, Butler, Obscenity, Supreme Court of Canada, LEAF, Feminism and the law, harm test, community standards test of harm

JEL Classification: K00

Suggested Citation

Jochelson, Richard, After Labaye: The Harm Test of Obscenity, the New Judicial Vacuum and the Relevance of Familiar Voices (June 9, 2010). Alberta Law Review, Vol. 46, No. 3, 2010, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2447873

Richard Jochelson (Contact Author)

Robson Hall, University of Manitoba Faculty of Law ( email )

Winnipeg R3T 5V4, Manitoba
Canada

HOME PAGE: http://www.robsoncrim.com

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
138
Abstract Views
705
Rank
380,094
PlumX Metrics