New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why

First Nations across New Brunswick have been demanding a public inquiry since the deaths of Chantel Moore and Rodney Levy at the hands of police barely a week apart from each other, and less than two months after the failed prosecution of the man alleged to have hit and killed Brady Francis. There a...

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Main Author: Metallic, Naiomi
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Schulich Law Scholars 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/524
https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/context/scholarly_works/article/1523/viewcontent/New_Brunswick_Needs_a_Public_Inquiry_into_Systemic_Racism_in_the_Justice_Syste.pdf
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spelling ftdalhouseunissl:oai:digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca:scholarly_works-1523 2023-06-11T04:11:42+02:00 New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why Metallic, Naiomi 2020-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/524 https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/context/scholarly_works/article/1523/viewcontent/New_Brunswick_Needs_a_Public_Inquiry_into_Systemic_Racism_in_the_Justice_Syste.pdf unknown Schulich Law Scholars https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/524 https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/context/scholarly_works/article/1523/viewcontent/New_Brunswick_Needs_a_Public_Inquiry_into_Systemic_Racism_in_the_Justice_Syste.pdf Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press Systemic racism public inquiry First Nations New Brunswick justice system Chantel Moore Rodney Levy Human Rights Law Indigenous Indian and Aboriginal Law Law and Race Law and Society text 2020 ftdalhouseunissl 2023-05-06T23:11:57Z First Nations across New Brunswick have been demanding a public inquiry since the deaths of Chantel Moore and Rodney Levy at the hands of police barely a week apart from each other, and less than two months after the failed prosecution of the man alleged to have hit and killed Brady Francis. There are serious problems in the province’s justice system. Mi’gmaq and Wolastoqiyik peoples are demanding more than just an investigation into the police conduct in Moore’s and Levy’s deaths; what is sought is a full examination of how New Brunswick’s justice system fails First Nations peoples in the province. Police operate in and are shaped by the wider justice system within which they work. First Nations recognize that you cannot fix one without fixing the other. The Premier is reluctant to agree to an inquiry and public perception of the need for one is mixed. I believe an inquiry is desperately needed and overdue. As a Mi’gmaq woman with numerous personal connections to both New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and as a lawyer and an academic who has worked for First Nations in both provinces, I often find myself comparing how they are treated. I have long felt that New Brunswick’s treatment of its First Nations people lags decades behind Nova Scotia. A key difference between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick is that in 1989, the Royal Commission on the Donald Marshall, Jr. Prosecution laid bare the overt and systemic racism that exists throughout Nova Scotia’s justice system. That report has served as a major catalyst for positive change. Text First Nations Mi’gmaq Wolastoqiyik Schulich Scholars (Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University) Indian Levy ENVELOPE(-66.567,-66.567,-66.320,-66.320)
institution Open Polar
collection Schulich Scholars (Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University)
op_collection_id ftdalhouseunissl
language unknown
topic Systemic racism
public inquiry
First Nations
New Brunswick justice system
Chantel Moore
Rodney Levy
Human Rights Law
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Law and Race
Law and Society
spellingShingle Systemic racism
public inquiry
First Nations
New Brunswick justice system
Chantel Moore
Rodney Levy
Human Rights Law
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Law and Race
Law and Society
Metallic, Naiomi
New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why
topic_facet Systemic racism
public inquiry
First Nations
New Brunswick justice system
Chantel Moore
Rodney Levy
Human Rights Law
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Law and Race
Law and Society
description First Nations across New Brunswick have been demanding a public inquiry since the deaths of Chantel Moore and Rodney Levy at the hands of police barely a week apart from each other, and less than two months after the failed prosecution of the man alleged to have hit and killed Brady Francis. There are serious problems in the province’s justice system. Mi’gmaq and Wolastoqiyik peoples are demanding more than just an investigation into the police conduct in Moore’s and Levy’s deaths; what is sought is a full examination of how New Brunswick’s justice system fails First Nations peoples in the province. Police operate in and are shaped by the wider justice system within which they work. First Nations recognize that you cannot fix one without fixing the other. The Premier is reluctant to agree to an inquiry and public perception of the need for one is mixed. I believe an inquiry is desperately needed and overdue. As a Mi’gmaq woman with numerous personal connections to both New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and as a lawyer and an academic who has worked for First Nations in both provinces, I often find myself comparing how they are treated. I have long felt that New Brunswick’s treatment of its First Nations people lags decades behind Nova Scotia. A key difference between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick is that in 1989, the Royal Commission on the Donald Marshall, Jr. Prosecution laid bare the overt and systemic racism that exists throughout Nova Scotia’s justice system. That report has served as a major catalyst for positive change.
format Text
author Metallic, Naiomi
author_facet Metallic, Naiomi
author_sort Metallic, Naiomi
title New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why
title_short New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why
title_full New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why
title_fullStr New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why
title_full_unstemmed New Brunswick Needs a Public Inquiry into Systemic Racism in the Justice System: Nova Scotia Shows Why
title_sort new brunswick needs a public inquiry into systemic racism in the justice system: nova scotia shows why
publisher Schulich Law Scholars
publishDate 2020
url https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/524
https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/context/scholarly_works/article/1523/viewcontent/New_Brunswick_Needs_a_Public_Inquiry_into_Systemic_Racism_in_the_Justice_Syste.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.567,-66.567,-66.320,-66.320)
geographic Indian
Levy
geographic_facet Indian
Levy
genre First Nations
Mi’gmaq
Wolastoqiyik
genre_facet First Nations
Mi’gmaq
Wolastoqiyik
op_source Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
op_relation https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/524
https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/context/scholarly_works/article/1523/viewcontent/New_Brunswick_Needs_a_Public_Inquiry_into_Systemic_Racism_in_the_Justice_Syste.pdf
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