Reparative justice
Carmela Murdocca “Supreme Court
of Canada in the 2012 decision of R
v Ipeelee, in
which the Court stated: ‘When sentencing an aboriginal offender … courts must take
judicial notice of such matters as the history of colonialism, displacement, and
residential schools and how that history continues to translate into lower
economic educational attainment, lower incomes, higher unemployment, higher
rates of substance abuse and suicide, and, of course, higher levels of
incarceration for aboriginal people’” This is the type of justice that is being
considered in some parts of the world, without getting into a particular case
looking at the idea of reparational justice will be considered. Some white
people ask, “what does slavery and discrimination have to do with me?” and “I
am not discriminatory and I am not a slave owner” BUT this is not about you!
THIS is about the years, decades, and centuries of poverty and
over-representation in prisons and the like which are iterations of
postcolonial problems. The goal of the reparations is not necessarily directly
related to white people. This type of justice considers a people not a person,
presumably. There is a level of concern that comes upon an individual when
reading a statement like the following by Sherene Razack “There is little
chance of disturbing relations of domination unless we considerchow they
structure our subject positions” source Looking White People in the Eye, which seems to single out particular
people, i.e. white people. “Over twenty years since the addition of this
restorative justice sentencing principle (R v. Gladue), extensive case law and
scholarship has shown that Gladue now encompasses a complex set of legal
and bureaucratic interpretations, arrangements, and discourses” Of course there is discourse alleging the
lack of justice in the statute because the offender gets consideration of their
life circumstances, no matter what offence
was committed, but whose “life history reveals the intergenerational
effects of settler colonialism”
Murdocca claims that “Gladue process has done little to address the issue of over-incarceration for Indigenous people, and it has done little to disrupt the reification of racial stereotypes, which is an ontological schema of racial colonial difference, concerning Indigenous people” As one would suspect the laws around reparation are very heatedly argued as either used to “in order to advance the progressive goal of solving the evil that is over incarceration” or to placate people with the illusion that the laws’ interpretations are helpful in some way. There are intents with such legal approaches to indigeneity, but there will continue to be work that needs to be done and ground to be given (sic) on both sides, legal ground that is . . . . . . . . .. . .
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