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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
Professor Drummond has raised so many objections to my study of mandatory retirement that I cannot reply to all of them without taxing the patience of readers of this JOURNAL. But one of his criticisms articulates a conception of liberal justice under the Charter, and it is to this important issue that I shall confine my reply.
1 LaSelva, Samuel V., “Mandatory Retirement: Intergenerational Justice and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,” this JOURNAL 20 (1987), 149–62Google Scholar; Drummond, Robert J., “Comment on ‘Mandatory Retirement: Intergenerational Justice and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms’ by Samuel LaSelva,” this JOURNAL 21 (1988), 585–95.Google Scholar
2 Drummond, “Comment on ‘Mandatory Retirement,’” 595.
3 Cited in Potter, David M., People of Plenty (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1954), 92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4 Drummond, “Comment on ‘Mandatory Retirement,’” 590.