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An introduction : considering diversity and justice in canada / Barbara Perry -- Framing difference / Barbara Perry -- The mythical norm / Barbara Perry -- Indigenous people in Canada : culture, colonialism, and criminal justice / Jane Dickson -- Chinese immigrants in Canada and social injustice : from overt to covert racial discrimination / Li Zong & Barbara Perry -- Crime and justice : the experiences of black canadians / Scot Wortley, Akwasi Owusu-Bempah & Kadija Lodge-Tulloch -- South Asians and justice in Canada : still in search of data / Barbara Perry & Shahid Alvi -- Justice and Islam in Canada / Denise Helly & Barbara Perry -- Zombies in Bel Air : class and marginalization in Canada / Emily Gerbrandt & Bryan Hogeveen -- Exploring the victimization, criminalization, and incarceration of women in Canada / Gillian Balfour -- Sexualities and difference : the victimization of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) people in Canada / Ellen Faulkner -- Aging behind bars : the "special needs" elderly prisoner in federal custody in Canada / Arshia U. Zaidi -- Putting youthful offending and victimization into context / Shahid Alvi -- Individuals with disabilities / Dick Sobsey & Heidi Janz -- Communicating from the margins : exploring intercultural communication / Valerie Pruegger -- Anti-racism training in the criminal justice system : a case for effective social context education / Karen R. Mock -- Criminal justice/social justice : making change / Barbara Perry.
In: Critical perspectives on crime and inequality
Introduction : missing pieces -- Racialized policing -- Colonial policing and beyond -- Over-policing Native American communities -- Under-policing Native American communities -- Impacts of disparate policing -- Policing differently?
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Setting the Context -- 2. Thinking about Hate Crime -- 3. A History of Violence: Colonization of America -- 4. Imaging American Indians -- 5. Contextualizing Native American Hate-Crime Victimization -- 6. The Forgotten Victims: Hate Crimes against Native Americans -- 7. The Cumulative Effects of Hate Crime -- 8. Responding to Anti-Indian Violence -- Bibliography -- Index.
In: Teaching texts in law and politics 6
In: Contributions in legal studies 66
In: Presidential studies quarterly: official publication of the Center for the Study of the Presidency, Band 49, Heft 1, S. 247-248
ISSN: 1741-5705
In: International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 4-15
ISSN: 2202-8005
This paper traces the meanings and impacts of the increased and transformed visibility of Muslim communities in Canada, as evidenced through their experiences of surveillance and violence. It explores the contours of this visibility as well as the consequences. Relationships between Muslims and non-Muslims are shaped in and through hostility, harassment and violence which is directed toward increasingly visible Muslim communities. Guiding the analysis of the connections between visibility and hate crime is a frame that draws upon Brighenti's ideal types of visibility: media-type, control-type and social-type.
In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Band 59, Heft 13, S. 1637-1654
ISSN: 1552-3381
While Canada proclaims itself to be among the most diverse and inclusive nations, the persistence of hate crime challenges this vision. The "myth of multiculturalism" is laid bare by exclusionary acts of harassment and violence. This article traces the tropes of multiculturalism before assessing the ways in which bias-motivated violence reveals the fissures in this facade. Optimistically, however, it concludes with a consideration of the unintended constructive impacts of ongoing patterns of hostility. That is, the rhetoric of multiculturalism still has some capacity to provide a foundation for critical discourse inspired by victimization.