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Reconciliation and Indigenous Justice
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05 April 2022

— Andrew Woolford, author of The Politics of Restorative Justice and Professor, Department of Sociology and Criminology University of Manitoba
“Essential reading for anyone who wants to understand how the Canadian criminal justice system fails Indigenous people and how Indigenous Justice can, under the right conditions, be fairer, less expensive and more effective.”
— Kent Roach, Professor of Law, University of Toronto
Chapter 1: The Legacy of the Residential Schools :
Chapter 2: Different Views of Crime: 1. Theoretical Constructions of
: 2. Constructions of Crime and Justice Policy
Chapter 3: The Seeds of Intergenerational Trauma : 1. Stories and Studies of Trauma
: 2. Victimized by the Residential Schools
: 3. Abuse All Around: School and Home
: 4. Subsequent Substance Abuse
: 5. Mental Health
: 6. Racism in and outside of Residential Schools
: 7. Loss of Culture
: 8. Deficient Parenting
Chapter 4: Intergenerational Trauma and Crime: 1. Intergenerational Domestic Violence
: 2. Intergenerational Sexual Abuse
: 3. Poverty
: 4. Child Welfare
: 5. Substance Abuse in Later Generations
: 6. FASD
: 7. Multiple Traumas
: 8. At a Community Level
Chapter 5: Reconciliation So Far : 1. What is Meant by Reconciliation
: 2. The Calls to Action and Indigenous Justice
: 3. Reconciliation Moving Forward
Chapter 6: The Status Quo is Not Reconciliation : 1. The Settlement Agreement
: 2. The Aboriginal Healing Foundation
: 3. The Problem with Deterrence
: 4. Punishment as Retribution
: 5. Indigenous-Specific Sentencing
: 6. Need for More Comprehensive Resolution
Chapter 7: Preventative Programming : 1. Justice Reinvestment and Long-Term Savings
: 2. Preventative Programming as Social Reparations
: 3. Indigenous-Specific Preventative Programming
Chapter 8: Arguments for Indigenous Criminal Justice: 1. Comparing Indigenous Justice to Restorative Justice
: 2. Why We Need Alternatives to Incarceration
: 3. Greater Victim Inclusion
: 4. Encouraging the Offender to be Responsible
: 5. Repairing Relationships
: 6. More Effective Than Incarceration
Chapter 9: Arguments against Restorative Justice: 1. Power Imbalances
: 2. Getting Off Easy
: 3. Doubts about Greater Efficacy
: 4. Divergence of Interests between the Participants
: 5. Not Taking Harm Seriously
: 6. Economic Concerns
Chapter 10: Ways Forward for Indigenous Justice: 1. Procedural Protections
: 2. Making Indigenous Justice More Effective
: 3. Indigenous Justice and Offender Responsibility
: 4. Will No Progress Be Made?
Chapter 11: Indigenous Corrections and Parole: 1. The Theory of Indigenous Healing in Prison
: 2. Canadian Correctional Law
: 3. Does It Work?
: 4. Lack of Resource Commitment
: 5. Security Classification and Parole
: 6. Risk Assessment and Parole
: 7. Indigenous Gangs and Parole
Chapter 12: Reconciliation in the Future: