Prison Born

Prison Born

Incarceration and Motherhood in the Colonial Shadow

Hansen, Robin F

University of Regina Press

11/2024

336

Mole

9781779400079

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
List of Tables
Introduction

PART I. OBSERVATIONS

1. Sentencing the Newborn
2. Automatic Separation in Canada

PART II. THEORY

3. A Systems View of the Legal System
4. The Colonial Lens: Seeing the "Savage" and the "Dying"
5. Case Study: The Stanley Acquittal

PART III. ANALYSIS: SPATIAL DEFINITIONS IN COLONIAL IDEOLOGY

6. The Instrumentalized Stereotype of the Unfit Indigenous Mother
7. Courts as the Gateway to Indigenous Over-Incarceration
8. Prison Wastelands and the Removal of Children

PART IV. ANALYSIS: OTHER ASPECTS OF THE SYSTEM

9. Law through the Androcentric Lens
10. Factors that Buffer the Legal System from Change

PART V. SOLUTIONS

11. The Illegality of Shackling a Pregnant Person in Labour
12. How the Law Protects a Newborn from Automatic Separation from Their Mother 195

Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Appendix A. Canadian Federal/Provincial/Territorial Ministers of Justice (2023)
Bibliography
Notes
Index
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incarceration; newborn health; human rights; Charter of Rights and Freedoms; Doctrine of Discovery; Indigenous over-incarceration; prisons; systemic bias; systemic discrimination; systemic racism; structural racism; spatialized justice; systems theory; stereotypes; prejudice; judges; corrections; sentencings; mothers; babies; shackling; labour; Indigenous health; foster care; Gladue sentencing; Indian Residential Schools; caregiving; carework; trauma; criminal law; infant separation; Canadian law; institutionalized racism; truth and reconciliation; female incarceration; Canadian legal system