Jessica E. Pulis, Alexander Hollenberg, Brianna Wodabek
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引用次数: 0
摘要
在加拿大,女性——尤其是土著女性——构成了被判刑人数增长最快的群体。这些趋势是殖民主义和寄宿学校遗产的持续影响的证据,学者们在不同程度上和在加拿大刑事司法系统的各级都有详细的记录。然而,为解决歧视和人数过多问题而进行的改革,主要是在现行制度内部进行改革,而不是改变制度本身。试图通过培训、规划、立法、就业和资金来“使白人制度本土化”的做法继续强化殖民主义,并使土著人民,特别是妇女和女孩失败。为了认识到这种伤害,Elizabeth Fry Peel-Halton和加拿大惩教服务(CSC)与当地长老小棕熊(Ernest W. Matton饰)合作,创造了一个空间,让女性可以在远离惩教设施的地方参加传统的汗房仪式和治疗,目的是为土著妇女和其他被判刑的妇女提供更真实的体验。虽然在联邦和省级监狱都有类似的汗汗小屋,但圣地是加拿大第一个这样的非监狱场所(即远离惩教机构)。这项研究探索了神圣的土地可能减少定居者-殖民地的传统砖块和酒吧纠正的方式,并可能鼓励和支持妇女的韧性和和解的故事。
Sacred Healings through Telling Story: Lessons from the Sacred Grounds
In Canada, women—in particular, Indigenous women—comprise the fastest growing population of those who are sentenced. These trends are evidence of the continued impact of colonialism and the residential school legacy that has been well documented by scholars in varying degrees and at all levels of the Canadian criminal justice system. However, changes to address discrimination and overrepresentation have mostly resulted in changes within the current system rather than changes to the system itself. Attempts to “indigenize the white system” through training, programming, legislation, employment, and funding continue to reinforce colonialism and fail those who are Indigenous, especially women and girls. In acknowledgment of such harm, Elizabeth Fry Peel-Halton and Correctional Services Canada (CSC) collaborated with local Elder, Little Brown Bear (Ernest W. Matton), to create space where women could participate in traditional sweat lodge ceremony and healing away from correctional facilities, with the goal of providing a more authentic experience for Indigenous women and other women who are sentenced. While there are sweat lodges at both federal and provincial facilities, the Sacred Grounds are the first off-site (i.e., away from the correctional institution) space like this in Canada. This research explores the ways the Sacred Grounds possibly reduces the settler-colonial imperatives of traditional bricks and bars corrections and may encourage and support women’s stories of resilience and reconciliation.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Applied Social Science publishes research articles, essays, research reports, teaching notes, and book reviews on a wide range of topics of interest to the social science practitioner. Specifically, we encourage submission of manuscripts that, in a concrete way, apply social science or critically reflect on the application of social science. Authors must address how they either improved a social condition or propose to do so, based on social science research.