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On the DLW Decision and the Meaning of Modernity →

On the Charter, Freedom of Expression, and Scientific Research

Posted on June 29, 2016 by Stephen Armstrong

Provision Commented On: Section 2(b), Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, Part I of theConstitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to
theCanada Act 1982 (UK), 1982, c 11

Does section 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms protect
the freedom of scientific research? Is conducting an experiment an
expressive act? These are important questions as Canadians face a world
increasingly dominated by rapid scientific advancement. Recently, the US
Senate and the US National Academy of Sciences have each called for greater
research into geoengineering (Committee on Geoengineering Climate, National
Research Council, Climate Intervention: Carbon Dioxide Removal and Reliable
Sequestration (Washington: 2015, The National Academies Press) at 107).
Such measures are the harbingers of an age in which humans are acquiring
the capability to control the Earth’s climate the way a sculptor shapes his
clay. Against this backdrop, the need for governance of geoengineering
research at both the international and national levels is clear. However,
any state measures to restrict or regulate research in Canada must conform
to the supreme law of the land. In this post, I will explore arguments for
and against the protection of scientific research under the free expression
guarantee contained in the Charter. While strong criticism against
inclusion of research as expression exists, I ultimately conclude that
theCharter likely protects freedom of scientific research within the
freedom of expression guarantee.

Charter Applicability

As a preliminary issue in any Charter analysis it is always necessary to
determine whether the impugned action is subject to Charter scrutiny.
Legislation is of course subject to the Charter. However, as scientific
research stands at the apex of this discussion, decisions made by
universities and other arms-length research or fund-granting bodies are
also relevant. The question of whether the Charter applies to universities
is itself the subject of significant jurisprudence and commentary
(See Pridgen v University of Calgary,2012 ABCA 139, but also see BC Civil
Liberties Association v University of Victoria, 2016 BCCA 162, and for
ABlawg commentary see here, here, here, and here). The inquiry into
applicability of theCharter is an inherently fact driven one. As I aim to
discuss freedom of expression and research in a more abstract sense, I have
only raised the issue ofCharter applicability to flag it for the reader and
will now move on.

The Scope of 2(b)

Does scientific research fall within the scope of section 2(b) of
the Charter? Section 2(b) reads: “Everyone has the following fundamental
freedoms…freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression…” When
interpreting the content of aCharter right it is important to keep in mind
that such rights are to be accorded a generous, purposive, and liberal
interpretation (Hunter v Southam Inc, [1984] 2 SCR 145 at paras 17-20). The
leading case on freedom of expression is Irwin Toy v Quebec (Attorney
General), [1989] 1 SCR 927. In a joint decision, then Chief Justice Brian
Dickson, with Justices Antonio Lamer and Bertha Wilson, set the scope of
the free expression guarantee to encompass all non-violent activity which
is intended to convey a meaning (Irwin Toy at paras 42-43). The Court also
highlighted the core principles underlying the free expression guarantee,
which were described as truth seeking, encouraging participation in social
and political decision making, as well as self-fulfillment and human
flourishing (Irwin Toy at para 54).

Note that the Irwin Toy definition of expression merely requires
the intention to convey meaning, which is different from a requirement that
someone else actually receives and understands the meaning. This point has
been reaffirmed in subsequent cases, and the law is clear that a claimant
alleging an infringement of their right to freedom of expression need not
show the act of expression actually conveyed a message to anyone.
The intention to convey meaning is the key (Canadian Broadcasting Corp v
Canada (Attorney General) 2011 SCC 2 at para 34 and R v Sharpe 2001 SCC
2 at para 108). Another point of interest is that expression includes more
than the spoken or written word. Expression includes the arts, physical
acts or gestures, and may even include such mundane acts as parking a car
(Irwin Toy at paras 42-43). In conclusion, expression includes all
non-violent activities intended to convey a meaning.

Application of the Law: Is Research Expressive?

Applying the law to the issue of scientific research, the question becomes
whether research or experimentation is expressive. In the US and Canada
this issue has been the subject of a lively academic debate among legal
scholars. Before diving into that debate, it is necessary to provide a
rough definition of “scientific research”. One overly wordy definition
emphasizes that scientific research is “the systematic collection or
generation of empirical data…and the utilization of unbiased and rigorous
modes of testing, analysis, and evaluation to draw inferences and
conclusions about those data” (Barry P. McDonald, “Government Regulation or
Other ‘Abridgements’ of Scientific Research: The Proper Scope of Judicial
Review Under the First Amendment” (2005) 54 Emory LJ 979 at 989). A more
concise definition conceives of science as “knowledge that is testable and
refutable” (Report of the Special Rapporteur in the Field of Cultural
Rights, Farida Shaheed: The Right to Enjoy the Benefits of Scientific
Progress and its Applications, UNHRC, 20th Sess, Agenda Item 3, UN Doc
A/HRC/20/26 (2012) 3 at 7). These definitions indicate that science is to
be equated with knowledge and scientific research is a means of producing
that knowledge.

Is research, the act of producing knowledge, performed with the intention
to convey a meaning? Some scholars see the activity of conducting research
as intrinsically expressive, equating it to speech, dance, or art, and
argue that it is a form of expression deeply intertwined with its meaning
to the point where form and content are inseparable (Barbara Billingsley &
Timothy Caulfield, “The Regulation of Science and the Charter of Rights:
Would a Ban on Non-Reproductive Human Cloning Unjustifiably Violate Freedom
of Expression?” (2004) 29 Queen’s LJ 647 at 663-665). A researcher only
conducts an experiment for the purpose of obtaining information. It is not
a deed devoid of meaning. The act of experimentation produces a recordable
result. This result is the meaning intended to be conveyed to the
researcher by her act of experimentation. Thus, the argument goes, research
is an expressive activity covered under the test laid out in Irwin Toy. In
short, this line of reasoning argues that research is inherently expressive
and thus falls within section 2(b) of theCharter.

This view has been criticized as ignoring “the fact that inquiry is not
itself communication” because “[i]nquiry is aimed at seeking information,
not conveying meaning” (Jocelyn Downie, Jennifer Llewellyn & Francoise
Baylis”, A Constitutional Defence of the Federal Ban on Human Cloning for
Research Purposes” (2005) 31 Queen’s LJ 353 at 361). What this critique
boils down to is that, since it is the researcher alone who conducts the
experiment and receives the results, the act of experimentation is not
expressive. No meaning is conveyed.

With respect, I would argue that this criticism is born of a narrow view of
expression that cuts against the grain of the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence
on the matter. In Canadian Broadcasting Corp (at para 34), Justice Marie
Deschamps, speaking for a united Court, reaffirmed that a section 2(b)
claimant does not need to show that the activity actually conveyed a
message with a meaning. What must be shown is that the act was performed to
convey a meaning. In Sharpe (at paras 107-115), Chief Justice Beverley
McLachlin stated plainly that self-created works intended solely for
private use by their creator fall within the ambit of section 2(b). It was
the constitutional guarantee of free self-expression that moved the Chief
Justice to read in a private-use exception to the Criminal Codeprohibition
on child pornography in Sharpe, which was recently upheld in R v
Barabash, 2015 SCC 29. To conclude, the criticism that the act of
conducting research is not expressive because a message is not communicated
to others appears to be unsupported by authority.

A secondary argument in favour of interpreting research as expressive
activity is that, by the very act of choosing and performing a particular
research method or research area, a scientist is implicitly signalling to
society that she thinks this area is important, needs attention, or is the
best way to solve a problem (Billingsley & Caulfield, “Regulation of
Science” at 665-667). In the context of geoengineering, merely choosing to
conduct atmospheric aerosol injection testing or ocean iron fertilization
testing may send the message to decision makers and to the public that the
climate change situation is dire.

An obvious criticism of this argument is that a scientist does not choose
an area or method of research for the primary purpose of sending a symbolic
message to society. Rather, as stated above, such research is performed
primarily to produce knowledge. If such implied meanings fell within the
scope of section 2(b), there would be no end to the slippage as seemingly
all activity would slide down the slope into the scope of freedom of
expression. This is a valid criticism, as allowing secondary symbolic
meanings to colour the intention of a person’s actions would create an
unworkable standard for defining an expressive act. It may be acceptable to
acknowledge that a person may perform an act with more than one purpose in
mind, however this line of reasoning takes this principle one step too far.
Almost anything a person does could arguably have a symbolic meaning. The
scope of the free expression guarantee would be expanded to the point where
section 2(b) would become meaningless and the only questions to be decided
would be whether the impugned government action was justifiable. To
conclude, the very act of performing a particular form of research may be
symbolically expressive. However, this line of reasoning is open to the
valid criticism that it would have a far too expansive effect on the scope
of section 2(b).

Two additional lines of argument for including scientific research in the
free expression guarantee originate from American scholars. One view is
that experimentation is a critical part of the scientific method, which is
highly connected to the “market place of ideas” in a historic, structural,
and purposive manner (Roy G Speece, Jr & Jennifer Weinzierl, “First
Amendment Protection of Experimentation: A Critical Review and Tentative
Synthesis/Reconstruction of the Literature” (1998) 8 S Cal Interdisc LJ 185
at 213). The second view, which is similar to the first, posits that
experimentation is uniquely facilitative of highly valued thought, and
should therefore be protected (Speece & Weinzierl at 218). At their core,
both arguments view experimentation as a pre-condition for scientific
speech (i.e. communicating the results of scientific research), rather than
viewing research itself an expressive act.

The notion that research is an essential pre-condition for the
communication of highly valuable expression is intuitively powerful. Chief
Justice McLachlin has remarked in obiter that “publishing scientific
research is valuable, and prohibitions on it have an impact on the right to
free expression in a serious manner” (Canada (Attorney General) v
JTI-Macdonald Corp, 2007 SCC 30 at para 52). It is plain and obvious that
section 2(b) protects a person’s right to publish scientific information.
Keeping in mind that Charter rights are to be accorded a generous, liberal,
and purposive interpretation, the purpose of protecting the right to
publish scientific information would be undermined if the means (or
pre-conditions) by which such information is obtained was not also
protected. Therefore, the argument goes, research ought to be a protected
form of expression, alongside publishing the results of research. The Chief
Justice adopted a similar line of reasoning when she held that even the
mere possession of expressive material engages freedom of expression
because “the possession of such material allows us to understand the
thought of others or consolidate our own thought” (Sharpe at para 25). In
its essence this is a pre-condition argument. A right to freedom of
expression would be meaningless without also protecting access to the means
of expression.

One criticism of the pre-condition argument is that, if the scope of
freedom of expression is so broad as to include every necessary
pre-condition required for individuals to express themselves, virtually
every conceivable action will be covered by the free expression guarantee
(Downie, Llewellyn & Baylis, “Human Cloning for Research Purposes” at 361).
Perhaps eating food and drinking water will be necessary pre-conditions to
expression, as one cannot express oneself if one dies of starvation or
dehydration. This is a slippery slope argument which should not be
accepted. Research has a historically and logically close facilitative
connection to scientific discovery and scientific communication (Speece &
Weinzierl, “Protection of Experimentation” at 217). This sets research
apart as a uniquely necessary pre-condition and can surely serve as a basis
for differentiating everyday human needs from essential pre-conditions
required to vindicate the rights and freedoms enshrined in the Charter. The
point is likely moot however, as I have argued above that research itself
should be considered an expressive act covered under 2(b).

There is also a line of cases in Canada holding that freedom of expression
protects listeners as well as speakers (Edmonton Journal v Alberta
(Attorney General), 1989 SCC 133 at para 85-86 and Canadian Broadcasting
Corp at paras 29-31). Typically, these cases involve the state restricting
the ability of the media to access certain public goings-on, such as court
proceedings. The reasoning for upholding the media’s right to access is
that it protects the public’s right to receive information about pressing
matters of the day, particularly concerning public institutions (Edmonton
Journal at para 85). Scientific research casts a wide net and doubtless
includes information about matters of pressing importance to the public.
Stretching this line of reasoning to a novel situation, the journalist who
gathers information at a courthouse about a trial and then relays that
information to the public may be analogous to the scientist who collects
data from an experiment and then communicates the results in a publication.
Thus, including research within the scope of the free expression guarantee
would protect the public’s right to receive valuable scientific information
of pressing importance.

One may also imagine the researcher herself as the “listener”, taking in
the information from the experiment, which takes the place of “speaker”.
This analogy gains more plausibility depending on the type of research
undertaken. If the experiment involves only the researcher interacting with
the natural world and interpreting the results, this is more likely
distinguishable from the type of listeners imagined in the Edmonton
Journal line of cases. However, if the research is of a social nature,
perhaps involving interviews with human subjects, there is clearly a
person-to-person communication occurring there. In such a case, the
argument for distinguishing scientific research from Edmonton Journal loses
strength. In conclusion on this point, I acknowledge that this would be a
novel application of the “right to listen” line of reasoning and would thus
likely stretch the case law beyond where a judge may be willing to take it.

International covenants and human rights obligations to which Canada is a
signatory may act as interpretive aids in scoping out the content of
aCharter right or freedom (See Baker v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] 2 SCR 817 at paras 69-70 and Saskatchewan Federation
of Labour v Saskatchewan, 2015 SCC 4 at paras 64-65, 68-71). Article 27 of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, GA Res 217 (III)A(1948), states
that “everyone has the right to…share in scientific advancement and its
benefits”. Article 19 also ensures the right to freedom of expression,
including the freedom to “…seek, receive and impart information…”. The same
language protecting the seeking of information as expression is included in
Article 17 of theInternational Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,19
December 1966, 999 UNTS 171 art 17 (entered into force 23 March 1976,
accession by Canada 19 May 1976). Article 15 of the International Covenant
on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, 16 December 1966, 999 UNTS 3 art
15 (entered into force 3 January 1976, accession by Canada 19 May
1976) recognizes the right of everyone to enjoy the benefits of scientific
progress and its applications, while also protecting “the freedom
indispensable for scientific research and creative activity.” These
agreements are not binding in domestic Canadian law, however they do colour
the courts’ interpretation of the Charter. These international covenants
and declarations point inevitably towards the protection of research and
experimentation under the freedom of expression.

Conclusion

Section 2(b) includes in its scope any non-violent activity that is
intended to convey a meaning. Research, as a means of seeking out
knowledge, may be understood as an inherently expressive activity. Multiple
international covenants and declarations prize scientific advancement and
research as a right not to be interfered with by the state. Further, a
scientist’s choice of experiment may purposefully act as a symbolic message
to society. However, this argument may expand the scope of section 2(b)
beyond what is practical or desirable. Additionally, research may be seen
as a historically connected and logically linked pre-condition to the
creation of scientific speech, which is to be cherished and guarded
jealously from state interference. Finally, freedom of expression includes
a “right to listen” or to receive information, which may include a freedom
to generate information (i.e. research results) to be received, though this
would be a novel use of the doctrine. Overall, there is ample ground on
which to conclude that the scope of section 2(b) likely includes scientific
research.

Research for this blog post was made possible by a generous grant from the
V. Kann Rasmussen Foundation in support of the Geoengineering Research
Governance Project (GRGP). The GRGP is an interdisciplinary study on
potential arrangements for the governance and regulation of geoengineering
research. It is a joint initiative led by Professor Anna-Maria Hubert at
the Faculty of Law at the University of Calgary in collaboration with the
University of Oxford and Institute of Advanced Sustainability Studies,
Potsdam (IASS). You can learn more about the project here:
http://www.ucalgary.ca/grgproject/

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About Stephen Armstrong
Stephen Armstrong is a 2018 Juris Doctor candidate at the University of
Calgary. Stephen received a Bachelor of Arts (Honours History) from Mount
Allison University. He is spending the 2016 summer as a research assistant
for Professor Anna-Maria Hubert, researching in the area of international
environmental law.

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