Perceptions of Justice: Issues in Indigenous and Community EmpowermentKayleen M. Hazlehurst Perceptions of Justice documents common emerging experience in Canada, Australia and New Zealand of growing significance to policy-makers. This book places criminal justice issues in contemporary political contexts and relates them to practical concerns about the rights and aspirations of indigenous peoples for self-determination. |
Contents
Alternatives to state | 1 |
Systemic discrimination Aboriginal people and | 27 |
The emergent | 51 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal communities aboriginal crime Aboriginal Deaths Aboriginal Justice Inquiry Aboriginal justice systems Aboriginal women approach arrest attempt Australia behaviour British Columbia Canada Canadian Canberra Commission into Aboriginal community policing context convictions court crime prevention criminal justice system Criminology cross-cultural cultural Cunneen Deaths in Custody Donald Marshall Jr employment factors Family Group Conference gender Hamilton and Sinclair Havemann implementation imprisonment incarceration increase Indian Act indigenous initiatives Inquiry of Manitoba Institute of Criminology issues jurisdiction justice reform juvenile justice Labour LaPrairie law and order Law Reform Commission legislation Maori Métis National Native communities non-Aboriginal Ottawa over-representation Pakeha patrol perspective police custody police officers political prison problem problem-oriented policing programme Queensland race racist recent reintegration relation Report response Royal Commission sentencing significant social South Wales statistics strategies Sydney theory Toronto victims violence Wagga Wagga Wagga Walpole Island welfare young offenders youth Zealand