Title: Critical Race Theory
1Critical Race Theory
- Marvin Coleby, Linda El-Halabi, Kendra
Hefti-Rossier, Olivier Jarda
2Omnibus Bill C-30
-
- Roundtable discussion regarding the Multicultural
Protection Act.
3Provision 1
Provision 2
Provision 3
Omnibus Bill C-30
- Provides citizens the right to a Canasian
education
Allows the freezing of assets of persons found to
have wired money to countries of concern in the
War on Terror
- Introduces an Asian-centric immigration policy
4Canasian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
- If Canasia's Charter was identical to Canada's
- Charter, would it adequately protect you under
- these provisions?
5Critical Race Theory, Canadian Law, and Society
6Revisionism
- "We are there because under the Providence of God
we are a Christian people that have given to the
subject races of the world the only kind of
decent government they have ever known applause
and you and I must carry our portion of that
responsibility if we are to be the true
Imperialists we should be. An Imperialist, to
me, means a man who accepts gladly and bears
proudly the responsibilities of his race and
breed." Prime Minister RB Bennett, 1914 - "We also have no history of colonialism. So we
have all of the things that many people admire
about the great powers but none of the things
that threaten or bother them," Prime Minister
Harper, 2009
7Key Concepts of CRT (Aylward)
- Beyond 'trashing' inadequate representation of
racial minorities - Necessary racial interpretation of the legal
system - Impartiality v. Colorblindness?
- CLS 'Utopian' Society
- The Invisible Obstacle (Christie, Bhaudaria)
- Through the doctrine of precedent, the law is
rooted in the past. It becomes difficult to
envision a racism-free jurisprudence when the law
relies upon concepts derived from a time when
chattel slavery existed, women were not persons,
and colonization including the theft of
Aboriginal lands, was in full force... Legal
precedents cannot transcend this racist history.
It is one of the primary, yet invisible obstacles
within the legal system (79 80)
8What does CRT add?
- Rights as relationships (Nedelsky)
- Reconstruction
- Racial Narrative and Legal Analysis
- Law tool vs. impediment
- Striking a balance
9Law and Society
- Racial context
- An Act Against Slavery 1793
- Public policy as a legitimizer
- Multidisciplinary active participation from
philosophers, non-legal scholars
10Methodology
- Beyond conventional rights analysis
- Race is central focus
- Contextual juridical analysis
- Epistemological diversity
- Uses unorthodox structure, language and form
- Complexity of multiple identities
- "drifting anchors dangling from short chains,
far, far overhead" (Williams) - Deconstruction (law as ideology, race relations)
- Reconstruction, emancipation (duality)
- Theoretical, methodological and pedagogical tools
that help us understand and address the
inextricable relationship between law and race
11Race through Canadian Law (Walker)
- Discrepancy between Canada's national dream and
reality - Race and the Supreme Court
- 1914 Quong Wing v. The King
- 1940 Christie v. York Corp.
- 1951 Noble and Wolfe v. Alley
- 1955 Narine-Singh v. Attorney General of Canada
- Systemic Racism
- Immigration
- Access to education
- Voting rights
- Military service
- Etc.
- What about law and race in Canada today?
12Policy as Legitimizer (Walker)
- Indian Act (1876)
- Tool of control and assimilation vs. tool that
protects Aboriginal rights - 1969 Trudeau proposes repeal of Act
- 2012 Harper proposes repeal of Act
- Safe Streets and Communities Act (SC 2012)
- Lowest crime rate in 40 years
- Increases mandatory minimum sentences
- Reduces the ability of judges to sentence certain
offenders to house arrest - Overrepresentation of Aboriginals in the prison
system (80 in prairies) - "Let's not talk about statistics, let's talk
about danger." - Public Safety Minister Vic Toews - Walker Reinforcing, legitimizing common
attitudes with dignity of law
13CRT Critique (Gaudreault-DesBiens)
- Epistemological privilege
- Credibility of the oppressed in the eyes of the
oppressor - Generalization of identity speaking with one
voice - Exclusion of critical scholars
- The limits of anecdotes
- Is 'emancipation' just another utopia?
14CRT in post 9/11 Canada
- Hate crimes against Arabs and Muslims rose by
over 1000 since 2001 - 48 of Canadians approve of racial profiling
- Maher Arar, Faisal Joseph, Omar Kader, Liban
Hussein of Ottawa - Politicians can get away and even earn political
credit for saying that Arabs, Muslims, Iranians,
are the new enemies of the West - "Islamicism is the single most pressing threat to
national security" - PM Harper to CBC news
15 Acceptable Dehumanization
16CRT's challenge
- The increasingly mainstream acceptance of the
post 9/11 curtailing of civil liberties of Arabs
and Muslims is a new issue for CRT
17R v RDS in 30 Seconds
- Halifax, Nova Scotia 1993
18 The Debate
Contextualists v. Formalists
19 The Critical Race Narrative of R.D.S.
- 1. Socio-historical Background
- 2. Black Neighbourhood
- 3. The Courtroom
20The Black Neighbourhood
21The Courtroom
-
- I am not saying that the Constable has misled
the court, although police officers have been
known to do that in the past. I am not saying
that the officer overreacted, but certainly
police officers do overreact, particularly when
they are dealing with non-white groups. That to
me indicates a state of mind right there that is
questionable. I believe that probably the
situation in this particular case is the case of
a young police officer who overreacted. I do
accept the evidence of R.D.S. that he was told
to shut up or he would be under arrest. It seems
to be in keeping with the prevalent attitude of
the day.
22Did R.D.S. further the CRT Agenda?
- 1. Narrative
- 2. Deconstruction
- the reasonable person test
- the doctrine of reasonable apprehension of bias
- the myth of neutrality and objectivity in the
context of judicial decision-making - concept of formal equality
- concept of legal reasoning as ahistorical
- 3. Reconstruction
23Africville
24Discussion
- Law should be emancipatory and liberatory for
everyone. And, although for Black people, law in
Canada has so often operated against us and so
seldom worked for us, law remains too valuable a
tool for us ever to abandon (Professor
Thornhill). - Being race conscious as a means to tackle racial
injustice reifies racial divisions. Discuss.