Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States

The historical relationship between the Indigenous Peoples of Canada and the federal government is strained as they have been subjected to continuous and ongoing injustices. To address various issues associated with Indigenous Peoples and the justice system, First Nations Policing Programs were intr...

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Other Authors: Westlund, Shayna (Author), Aulakh, Harpreet (Thesis advisor), Mount Royal Uiversity Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies (Degree granting institution)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Mount Royal University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/mru:816/datastream/PDF/download
https://mru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/mru%3A816
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spelling ftmountroyaluniv:oai:mru.arcabc.ca:mru_816 2023-10-29T02:36:20+01:00 Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States Westlund, Shayna (Author) Aulakh, Harpreet (Thesis advisor) Mount Royal Uiversity Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies (Degree granting institution) electronic https://mru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/mru:816/datastream/PDF/download https://mru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/mru%3A816 eng eng Mount Royal University This work is completed in its entirety by Shayna Westlund. All rights are reserved to the information provided within this document. author Indigenous policing First Nations policing program Policing Indigenous communities Text thesis ftmountroyaluniv 2023-09-30T23:05:19Z The historical relationship between the Indigenous Peoples of Canada and the federal government is strained as they have been subjected to continuous and ongoing injustices. To address various issues associated with Indigenous Peoples and the justice system, First Nations Policing Programs were introduced. Extensive research has been conducted evaluating Canada's Indigenous policing practices; however, there are gaps in the literature pertaining to best practices and what can be improved. This research aims to highlight the strengths and shortcomings of Canada's FNPP and Indigenous policing practices while reflecting on the Indigenous policing practices observed in Australia and the United States in an effort to determine the best and actionable practices that can be implemented in Canada. Through a descriptive analysis of purposively selected literature, this research suggests that Indigenous policing in Canada can be enhanced by redefining its services, implementing community patrols similar to what is employed in Australian Indigenous communities, and securing adequate funding. Additionally, further research evaluating Indigenous policing in Australia and the United States is necessary. Thesis First Nations Mount Royal University Institutional Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Mount Royal University Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftmountroyaluniv
language English
topic Indigenous policing
First Nations policing program
Policing Indigenous communities
spellingShingle Indigenous policing
First Nations policing program
Policing Indigenous communities
Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States
topic_facet Indigenous policing
First Nations policing program
Policing Indigenous communities
description The historical relationship between the Indigenous Peoples of Canada and the federal government is strained as they have been subjected to continuous and ongoing injustices. To address various issues associated with Indigenous Peoples and the justice system, First Nations Policing Programs were introduced. Extensive research has been conducted evaluating Canada's Indigenous policing practices; however, there are gaps in the literature pertaining to best practices and what can be improved. This research aims to highlight the strengths and shortcomings of Canada's FNPP and Indigenous policing practices while reflecting on the Indigenous policing practices observed in Australia and the United States in an effort to determine the best and actionable practices that can be implemented in Canada. Through a descriptive analysis of purposively selected literature, this research suggests that Indigenous policing in Canada can be enhanced by redefining its services, implementing community patrols similar to what is employed in Australian Indigenous communities, and securing adequate funding. Additionally, further research evaluating Indigenous policing in Australia and the United States is necessary.
author2 Westlund, Shayna (Author)
Aulakh, Harpreet (Thesis advisor)
Mount Royal Uiversity Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies (Degree granting institution)
format Thesis
title Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States
title_short Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States
title_full Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States
title_fullStr Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking Indigenous policing on reservation lands in Canada: Reflections from Australia and the United States
title_sort rethinking indigenous policing on reservation lands in canada: reflections from australia and the united states
publisher Mount Royal University
url https://mru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/mru:816/datastream/PDF/download
https://mru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/mru%3A816
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_rights This work is completed in its entirety by Shayna Westlund. All rights are reserved to the information provided within this document.
author
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