by Justin Piché, Assistant Professor, Criminology, University of Ottawa
This blog tracks and evaluates a series of “law and order” measures by the current federal government. It is written by the Criminalization and Punishment Education Project (CPEP), a group of criminologists based at Carleton University and the University of Ottawa, along with concerned community members with policy, research and lived experiences pertaining to the Canadian penal system. The evidence shows that the kinds of measures championed by the Harper Conservatives are costly and counterproductive. They are also, in our view, unjust and inhumane.
This blog tracks and evaluates a series of “law and order” measures by the current federal government. It is written by the Criminalization and Punishment Education Project (CPEP), a group of criminologists based at Carleton University and the University of Ottawa, along with concerned community members with policy, research and lived experiences pertaining to the Canadian penal system. The evidence shows that the kinds of measures championed by the Harper Conservatives are costly and counterproductive. They are also, in our view, unjust and inhumane.
These measures include sentencing reforms that put
more people in prison, for longer periods of time, with fewer chances for
release into the community prior to the completion of their sentences.
Most notable among these measures is the introduction of new mandatory minimum
sentences, including for the production and sale of marijuana.
Other changes make conditions within the walls of
federal penitentiaries harsher and more dangerous, as Canadian prison officers have also argued.
Notable examples are increases in the use of double-bunking in
cells the size of average household washrooms that has taken place in recent
years.
There are also measures that undermine efforts by
former prisoners to reintegrate successfully into the community, such as new
eligibility requirements and application fee increases that put pardons (or
what are now called “record suspensions”) out of reach for many seeking a fresh start
following the completion of their sentences.
Every month, CPEP will post a series of blog
entries that will document developments in penal policy and practice that are
doing considerable harm to Canadian society. We will point to viable
alternatives for developing community and preventing victimization. We will
direct readers to relevant academic and government studies, along with other
materials we have obtained from sources that raise questions about the punitive
path being taken.
We invite commentary from those with policy and
research backgrounds, as well as practitioners and those with lived experiences
of being criminalized in Canada. If you are interested in getting involved,
please contact Professor Justin Piché at justin.piche@uottawa.ca.
THIS EDITION
by Claire Delisle, Instructor, Criminology,
University of Ottawa
by Laura McKendy, PhD Student, Sociology, Carleton
University
by Jennifer M. Kilty, Associate Professor,
Criminology, University of Ottawa
by Adina Ilea, PhD Candidate, Criminology,
University of Ottawa
by Samantha McAleese, PhD Student, Sociology,
Carleton University
by Kyle Coady, PhD Student, Sociology, Carleton
University
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