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Unsettling Colonialism in the Canadian Criminal Justice System: Acknowledgements

Unsettling Colonialism in the Canadian Criminal Justice System
Acknowledgements
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  • Project HomeUnsettling Colonialism in the Canadian Criminal Justice System
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Introduction
  4. Human to Human: A Poem Written for Pamela George
  5. Part I. Settler Colonialism and Canadian Criminal Justice in Context
    1. 1. Memoryscapes: Canadian Chattel Slavery, Gaslighting, and Carceral Phantom Pain
    2. 2. The Destruction of Families: Canadian Indian Residential Schools and the Refamilialization of Indigenous Children
    3. 3. Walking on a Settler Road: Days in the Life of Colonialism
    4. 4. Colonial Mythmaking in Canadian Police Museums on the Prairies
    5. 5. Original Savages
  6. Part II. The Colonial Violence of Criminal Justice Operations
    1. 6. “You’re Reminded of Who You Are in Canada, Real Quick”: Racial Gendered Violence and the Politics of Redress
    2. 7. Clearing the Plains Continues: Settler Justice and the “Accidental” Murder of Colten Boushie
    3. 8. Killing in the Name Of: Police Killings of Indigenous People in Canada
    4. 9. Elders in Prison and Cycles of Abuse
    5. 10. Gendered Genocide: The Overincarceration of Indigenous Women and Girls
  7. Part III. The Bureaucratic Trappings of Colonial Justice
    1. 11. Moral Culpability and Addiction: Sentencing Decisions Two Decades After R. v. Gladue
    2. 12. Cookie-Cutter Corrections: The Appearance of Scientific Rigour, the Assumption of Homogeneity, and the Fallacy of Division
    3. 13. To Be Treated as Human: Federally Sentenced Women and the Struggle for Human Rights
    4. 14. Earth and Spirit: Corrections Is Not Another Word for Healing
    5. 15. Shit: A Poem Dedicated to All Incarcerated Sisters
    6. 16. Incompatible or Congruent? Can Indigenous and Western Legal Systems Work Together?
  8. Part IV. Creative Resistances and Reimagining Settler-Colonial Justice
    1. 17. Countering the Legal Archive on the Death of Neil Stonechild: Analyzing David Garneau’s Evidence (2006) as an Aesthetic Archive
    2. 18. Ethics of Representation / Ethics and Representation: Dads Doin’ Time, Incarcerated Indigenous Writers, and the Public Gaze
    3. 19. In the Name of the Native Brother and Sisterhood
    4. 20. Spirit of the Stolen: MMIWG2S+ People and Indigenous Grassroots Organizing
    5. 21. Critique’s Coloniality and Pluriversal Recognition: On the Care as the Ecological Ground of Justice
  9. Conclusion
  10. List of Contributors

Acknowledgements

We acknowledge the traditional caregivers of this land now known as Canada. We also acknowledge those impacted by the current system of justice. We honour their visions and directions for broader and more collaborative justices. A generous thank you to Pamela Holway for the ongoing support, insight, and direction, Peter Midgley for the editorial precision, and Athabasca University Press for recognizing the importance of this work. We extend this appreciation to Marie Sophie Terp-Magnan, Madison McLaughlin, Sara Racicot, jay s.c. (Joshua Sallos), and Jane Tims for their support in the production of this material.

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