黑人的生活,复杂性,细微差别和洞察力

IF 1.1 3区 社会学 Q3 SOCIOLOGY
Johanne Jean-Pierre, Carl E. James
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This discourse espoused by educational institutions, social agencies, business establishments, and government bureaucracies is taken to be an indication of their commitment to addressing the needs, interests, expectations, and aspirations of racialized members of society that they serve or are expected to serve.</p><p>Indigenous and Black Canadians are two racialized groups that have been identified as needing special or purposeful measures by which they would be able to gain access to employment, education, social, health and other services. Indeed, data have long shown that Indigenous and Black people continue to experience barriers to their participation in these areas; and as such, tend to be under-represented (Briggs, <span>2018</span>; James, <span>2021</span>; Thompson, <span>2018</span>), even as legislation, policies, reports and programs like Multiculturalism (1971), Employment Equity (1984), Truth and Reconciliation (2015) and other such mechanisms are thought to signal governments’, businesses’, and institutions’ commitment – and that of society generally – to accommodating and responding to the needs, concerns, issues and challenges of minoritized Canadians. But clearly, these mechanisms have failed to change the situation for these Canadians because if they did, there would be no need for today's education and employment initiatives to specifically identify Indigenous and Black people. In other words, if indeed, all minoritized or racialized people were benefitting from the promise of multiculturalism and Employment Equity policies and programs, then today's EDID initiatives would not have had to specially target Black people.</p><p>Why only in recent years – particularly during this period of racial reckoning – are Canadians prepared to recruit Black and Indigenous peoples into their establishments through EDID initiatives? A possible answer to this question might be that historically Canadians – socialized by their institutions – have maintained that unlike the United States, it is “culture” (typically attributed to being immigrants) and not “race” that accounts for the differences among ethnoracial group members. Underlying this notion is the colonial discourse of color-blindness structured on the whiteness of the European settler colonial project; and which has operated in the erasure, enslavement, cultural genocide, and segregation of Indigenous people (Clarke &amp; Whitt, <span>2019</span>; Dion, <span>2022</span>; Tuck &amp; Yang, 2012; Wolfe, <span>2006</span>); as well as in the capture, enslavement, exclusion, segregation of African/Black people (Backhouse, <span>1999</span>; Dei, <span>2017</span>; Walker, <span>2008</span>). Essentially, Canada's settler colonial project has contributed to a situation in which Black, like Indigenous, peoples have been subjected to a racialization system that “robbed them of their humanity and encased them in a culture of whiteness with education as a major instrument of assimilation” (James forthcoming); and for Black people that racialization is understood as anti-Black racism.</p><p>Addressing the formidable modality of anti-Black racism requires that we disaggregate the group of people that Canada refers to as “visible minority;” thereby giving consideration to the particular experiences of Black people; and in doing so, give attention to the intersection of race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexuality, language, dis/ability, and other identifications. It requires that we examine Black experiences as not solely determined through the lens of immigration (status or generation), which is often the case in many studies (Thésée &amp; Carr, <span>2016</span>). It also involves acknowledging the pervasiveness of anti-Black racism in several settings and domains: criminal justice system (Bernard &amp; Smith, <span>2018</span>; Samuels-Wortley, <span>2019</span>), child welfare (Antwi-Boasiako et al., <span>2020</span>; Boatswain-Kyte et al., <span>2022</span>), education (Briggs, <span>2018</span>; James, <span>2021</span>; Jean-Pierre, <span>2021</span>; Kamanzi, <span>2021</span>), health (Public Health Agency of Canada, <span>2020</span>), labor market (Hasford, <span>2016</span>; Madibbo, <span>2021</span>; Sall, <span>2021</span>), and the environment (Waldron, <span>2018</span>).</p><p>Sociology provides a lens through which we can excavate the consequences of systemic anti-Black racism and how the history of Black people's early settlement in Canadian society as enslaved people continues to define them and dictate their presence and potential as citizens. And their race is often the basis upon which they are acknowledged, social roles are assigned, status is conferred, competency is determined, and agency is exercised (James, <span>2010</span>; p. 285). As such, contributors to this special edition aim to move us beyond surface or emotional reactions to EDID claims and initiatives using research to build our understanding toward addressing anti-Black racism as it is lived and experienced in Canadian society (Jean-Pierre &amp; James, <span>2020</span>). The journal articles and the Committing Sociology essays in English and French, by Black scholars as sole or lead authors, reflect the heterogenous and nuances of Black life, as well as the complexity and heterogeneity of the Black experience in Canada.</p><p>The articles in this special issue touch upon various topics such as policy, immigration, education, and policing, spanning from national to local scopes, and reflecting realities from various provinces with theoretical, reflexive, and empirical approaches. The first article from Dr. Maureen Kihika presents an informed analysis of the policy of multiculturalism's failure to encompass and protect Black people's freedoms and rights. She argues that institutionalized multiculturalism obscures the social construction, subordination and marginalization of Black Canadians. In the second article, Dr. Oral Robinson examines critically the potential of Black affirming pedagogy in higher education. Drawing from antiracist, anticolonial and Blackcentricity lenses, he elaborates on how Black affirming pedagogies affirm Blackness, belonging, action for change, multiple sources of knowledge, solidarity,allyship, and the humanity of instructors and students in the classroom. In the third article, Dr. Natalie Deckard, Dr. Camisha Sibblis and Dr. Kemi Salawu Anazodo compare avoidance behaviors towards law enforcement based on immigration generation status among African Canadians. Using <i>Statistics Canada General Social Survey</i> data, their quantitative analysis shows how socialization in Canada is critical to understand the differences in distrust and avoidance towards law enforcement among different immigrant generations of Black Canadians. In the fourth article, Dr. Timothy Bryan examines police responses to racially motivated hate crimes that affect Black Canadians. Drawing from a qualitative study, he demonstrates how although Black Canadians continue to experience racial profiling and police excessive force, law enforcement’ investigative efforts are lacking when Black people are victims of hate crimes.</p><p>The last two articles are in French. In the fifth article, Dr. Johanne Jean-Pierre's article reveals how critical hope shapes English-speaking and French-speaking Black Canadians’ aspirations for change in education. Based on a bilingual qualitative study conducted in Nova Scotia, she shows how material hope, Socratic hope and audacious hope, key components of critical hope in education (Duncan-Andrade, <span>2009</span>), are found among African Nova Scotians and Black immigrants’ narratives alike. In the last article, Dr. Leyla Sall and collaborators discuss the experiences of Francophone Black immigrants who choose to join Canadian francophone minority communities across the country. Drawing from critical race theory and a qualitative approach, they show that ethnic nationalism and the failure to address anti-Black racism contradict the official discourse of inclusivity. These articles exemplify the multiple ways of examining Black life, from policy, to pedagogy in higher education, to the relationship between law enforcement and Black Canadians, schooling, immigration, and the intersectionality of race and language.</p><p>The Committing Sociology essays discuss Black solidarity, aesthetics, entrepreneurship, political sociology, and racialized labor conditions. The first contribution is a collective essay from the steering committee and co-founding members of the <i>Canadian Sociological Association</i> Black Caucus that discuss the origin and the necessary role of the CSA Black Caucus. Dr. Shirley Anne Tate, Canada Research Chair in Feminism &amp; Intersectionality, is the author of the second essay which discusses how the social construction of beauty is not race-neutral but rather, that dominant beauty norms are shaped by anti-Blackness. The third contribution is authored by Dr. Amos Nkrumah where he discusses how anti-Black racism plays a role in the social interactions and business outcomes of Black immigrant entrepreneurs in the Prairies. In the fourth contribution, Dr. Prentiss A. Dantzler examines how Black political movements, such as Black Lives Matter (BLM), enable Black communities to re-imagine urban space and life. Similarly, Dr. Anne-Marie Livingstone focuses on political sociology and emphasizes the importance of studying racial politics, public institutions, and tangible initiatives that challenge racist policies and practices. In the last essay, Dr. Claudine Bonner takes a retrospective look at Black steelworkers’ differential treatment in Nova scotia during the early 20<sup>th</sup> century due to anti-Black racism.</p><p>As the United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent (2015-2024) is unfolding, sociologists should take heed and even teach about the recommendations of the United Nations Human Rights Council (<span>2017</span>) directed to the Canadian government. One of these recommendations stipulates the necessity of the collection of race-based data by government agencies in order to address existing gaps and patterns of inequality. Such data should not be used solely for descriptive or discrepancy analysis, but to inform tangible policies and practices across institutions. There are many topics that remain to be investigated theoretically and empirically from the point of view of Black Canadians regarding several areas in sociology (Jean-Pierre &amp; McCready, <span>2019</span>). Whether the research undertaken examines micro-, meso- or macro-level issues, has a regional or national scope, is conducted in English and/or in French, we advise that researchers work with and for the Black communities affected by their research. We should also interrogate the pedagogical strategies and resources, such as the assigned readings, that we mobilize to teach about Black Canadians in undergraduate and graduate courses. There is value in learning about society through the experiences and viewpoints of Black Canadians. In saying this, we are simply reiterating what sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois (<span>1897</span>) asserted more than a century ago, that Black people from Africa and the African diaspora have a unique contribution to make to humanity as a social group which no other group can make in their stead. Thus, beyond analyzing and challenging racism, we contend that there are critical insights that can illuminate our understanding of Canadian society and humanity through research that centers Black Canadian voices.</p>","PeriodicalId":51649,"journal":{"name":"Canadian Review of Sociology-Revue Canadienne De Sociologie","volume":"59 4","pages":"430-435"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-11-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/oa_pdf/f4/fe/CARS-59-430.PMC10098828.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Black life, complexities, nuances, and insights\",\"authors\":\"Johanne Jean-Pierre,&nbsp;Carl E. James\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/cars.12410\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>This was Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's communiqué to Canadians on Emancipation Day, August 1, 2022. As such, one would expect that hearing such assertion from the Prime Minister, then under his leadership, we would have seen the unsatisfactory social, economic, educational, employment, and health conditions of Black Canadians being addressed knowing the historical “legacy of systemic anti-Black racism.” But it might be that such language is reflective of the current context in which worldwide protests following the murder of George Floyd (May 25, 2020) by a Minneapolis police officer in the US1 and the racial reckoning that it generated, have resulted in a discourse of “Equity, Diversity, Inclusion and Decolonization” (EDID). This discourse espoused by educational institutions, social agencies, business establishments, and government bureaucracies is taken to be an indication of their commitment to addressing the needs, interests, expectations, and aspirations of racialized members of society that they serve or are expected to serve.</p><p>Indigenous and Black Canadians are two racialized groups that have been identified as needing special or purposeful measures by which they would be able to gain access to employment, education, social, health and other services. Indeed, data have long shown that Indigenous and Black people continue to experience barriers to their participation in these areas; and as such, tend to be under-represented (Briggs, <span>2018</span>; James, <span>2021</span>; Thompson, <span>2018</span>), even as legislation, policies, reports and programs like Multiculturalism (1971), Employment Equity (1984), Truth and Reconciliation (2015) and other such mechanisms are thought to signal governments’, businesses’, and institutions’ commitment – and that of society generally – to accommodating and responding to the needs, concerns, issues and challenges of minoritized Canadians. But clearly, these mechanisms have failed to change the situation for these Canadians because if they did, there would be no need for today's education and employment initiatives to specifically identify Indigenous and Black people. In other words, if indeed, all minoritized or racialized people were benefitting from the promise of multiculturalism and Employment Equity policies and programs, then today's EDID initiatives would not have had to specially target Black people.</p><p>Why only in recent years – particularly during this period of racial reckoning – are Canadians prepared to recruit Black and Indigenous peoples into their establishments through EDID initiatives? A possible answer to this question might be that historically Canadians – socialized by their institutions – have maintained that unlike the United States, it is “culture” (typically attributed to being immigrants) and not “race” that accounts for the differences among ethnoracial group members. Underlying this notion is the colonial discourse of color-blindness structured on the whiteness of the European settler colonial project; and which has operated in the erasure, enslavement, cultural genocide, and segregation of Indigenous people (Clarke &amp; Whitt, <span>2019</span>; Dion, <span>2022</span>; Tuck &amp; Yang, 2012; Wolfe, <span>2006</span>); as well as in the capture, enslavement, exclusion, segregation of African/Black people (Backhouse, <span>1999</span>; Dei, <span>2017</span>; Walker, <span>2008</span>). Essentially, Canada's settler colonial project has contributed to a situation in which Black, like Indigenous, peoples have been subjected to a racialization system that “robbed them of their humanity and encased them in a culture of whiteness with education as a major instrument of assimilation” (James forthcoming); and for Black people that racialization is understood as anti-Black racism.</p><p>Addressing the formidable modality of anti-Black racism requires that we disaggregate the group of people that Canada refers to as “visible minority;” thereby giving consideration to the particular experiences of Black people; and in doing so, give attention to the intersection of race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexuality, language, dis/ability, and other identifications. It requires that we examine Black experiences as not solely determined through the lens of immigration (status or generation), which is often the case in many studies (Thésée &amp; Carr, <span>2016</span>). It also involves acknowledging the pervasiveness of anti-Black racism in several settings and domains: criminal justice system (Bernard &amp; Smith, <span>2018</span>; Samuels-Wortley, <span>2019</span>), child welfare (Antwi-Boasiako et al., <span>2020</span>; Boatswain-Kyte et al., <span>2022</span>), education (Briggs, <span>2018</span>; James, <span>2021</span>; Jean-Pierre, <span>2021</span>; Kamanzi, <span>2021</span>), health (Public Health Agency of Canada, <span>2020</span>), labor market (Hasford, <span>2016</span>; Madibbo, <span>2021</span>; Sall, <span>2021</span>), and the environment (Waldron, <span>2018</span>).</p><p>Sociology provides a lens through which we can excavate the consequences of systemic anti-Black racism and how the history of Black people's early settlement in Canadian society as enslaved people continues to define them and dictate their presence and potential as citizens. And their race is often the basis upon which they are acknowledged, social roles are assigned, status is conferred, competency is determined, and agency is exercised (James, <span>2010</span>; p. 285). As such, contributors to this special edition aim to move us beyond surface or emotional reactions to EDID claims and initiatives using research to build our understanding toward addressing anti-Black racism as it is lived and experienced in Canadian society (Jean-Pierre &amp; James, <span>2020</span>). The journal articles and the Committing Sociology essays in English and French, by Black scholars as sole or lead authors, reflect the heterogenous and nuances of Black life, as well as the complexity and heterogeneity of the Black experience in Canada.</p><p>The articles in this special issue touch upon various topics such as policy, immigration, education, and policing, spanning from national to local scopes, and reflecting realities from various provinces with theoretical, reflexive, and empirical approaches. The first article from Dr. Maureen Kihika presents an informed analysis of the policy of multiculturalism's failure to encompass and protect Black people's freedoms and rights. She argues that institutionalized multiculturalism obscures the social construction, subordination and marginalization of Black Canadians. In the second article, Dr. Oral Robinson examines critically the potential of Black affirming pedagogy in higher education. Drawing from antiracist, anticolonial and Blackcentricity lenses, he elaborates on how Black affirming pedagogies affirm Blackness, belonging, action for change, multiple sources of knowledge, solidarity,allyship, and the humanity of instructors and students in the classroom. In the third article, Dr. Natalie Deckard, Dr. Camisha Sibblis and Dr. Kemi Salawu Anazodo compare avoidance behaviors towards law enforcement based on immigration generation status among African Canadians. Using <i>Statistics Canada General Social Survey</i> data, their quantitative analysis shows how socialization in Canada is critical to understand the differences in distrust and avoidance towards law enforcement among different immigrant generations of Black Canadians. In the fourth article, Dr. Timothy Bryan examines police responses to racially motivated hate crimes that affect Black Canadians. Drawing from a qualitative study, he demonstrates how although Black Canadians continue to experience racial profiling and police excessive force, law enforcement’ investigative efforts are lacking when Black people are victims of hate crimes.</p><p>The last two articles are in French. In the fifth article, Dr. Johanne Jean-Pierre's article reveals how critical hope shapes English-speaking and French-speaking Black Canadians’ aspirations for change in education. Based on a bilingual qualitative study conducted in Nova Scotia, she shows how material hope, Socratic hope and audacious hope, key components of critical hope in education (Duncan-Andrade, <span>2009</span>), are found among African Nova Scotians and Black immigrants’ narratives alike. In the last article, Dr. Leyla Sall and collaborators discuss the experiences of Francophone Black immigrants who choose to join Canadian francophone minority communities across the country. Drawing from critical race theory and a qualitative approach, they show that ethnic nationalism and the failure to address anti-Black racism contradict the official discourse of inclusivity. These articles exemplify the multiple ways of examining Black life, from policy, to pedagogy in higher education, to the relationship between law enforcement and Black Canadians, schooling, immigration, and the intersectionality of race and language.</p><p>The Committing Sociology essays discuss Black solidarity, aesthetics, entrepreneurship, political sociology, and racialized labor conditions. The first contribution is a collective essay from the steering committee and co-founding members of the <i>Canadian Sociological Association</i> Black Caucus that discuss the origin and the necessary role of the CSA Black Caucus. Dr. Shirley Anne Tate, Canada Research Chair in Feminism &amp; Intersectionality, is the author of the second essay which discusses how the social construction of beauty is not race-neutral but rather, that dominant beauty norms are shaped by anti-Blackness. The third contribution is authored by Dr. Amos Nkrumah where he discusses how anti-Black racism plays a role in the social interactions and business outcomes of Black immigrant entrepreneurs in the Prairies. In the fourth contribution, Dr. Prentiss A. Dantzler examines how Black political movements, such as Black Lives Matter (BLM), enable Black communities to re-imagine urban space and life. Similarly, Dr. Anne-Marie Livingstone focuses on political sociology and emphasizes the importance of studying racial politics, public institutions, and tangible initiatives that challenge racist policies and practices. In the last essay, Dr. Claudine Bonner takes a retrospective look at Black steelworkers’ differential treatment in Nova scotia during the early 20<sup>th</sup> century due to anti-Black racism.</p><p>As the United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent (2015-2024) is unfolding, sociologists should take heed and even teach about the recommendations of the United Nations Human Rights Council (<span>2017</span>) directed to the Canadian government. One of these recommendations stipulates the necessity of the collection of race-based data by government agencies in order to address existing gaps and patterns of inequality. Such data should not be used solely for descriptive or discrepancy analysis, but to inform tangible policies and practices across institutions. There are many topics that remain to be investigated theoretically and empirically from the point of view of Black Canadians regarding several areas in sociology (Jean-Pierre &amp; McCready, <span>2019</span>). Whether the research undertaken examines micro-, meso- or macro-level issues, has a regional or national scope, is conducted in English and/or in French, we advise that researchers work with and for the Black communities affected by their research. We should also interrogate the pedagogical strategies and resources, such as the assigned readings, that we mobilize to teach about Black Canadians in undergraduate and graduate courses. There is value in learning about society through the experiences and viewpoints of Black Canadians. In saying this, we are simply reiterating what sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois (<span>1897</span>) asserted more than a century ago, that Black people from Africa and the African diaspora have a unique contribution to make to humanity as a social group which no other group can make in their stead. Thus, beyond analyzing and challenging racism, we contend that there are critical insights that can illuminate our understanding of Canadian society and humanity through research that centers Black Canadian voices.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":51649,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Canadian Review of Sociology-Revue Canadienne De Sociologie\",\"volume\":\"59 4\",\"pages\":\"430-435\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.1000,\"publicationDate\":\"2022-11-21\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/oa_pdf/f4/fe/CARS-59-430.PMC10098828.pdf\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Canadian Review of Sociology-Revue Canadienne De Sociologie\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"90\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cars.12410\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"SOCIOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Canadian Review of Sociology-Revue Canadienne De Sociologie","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cars.12410","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"SOCIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

社会学提供了一个视角,通过这个视角,我们可以挖掘出系统性的反黑人种族主义的后果,以及黑人作为奴隶在加拿大社会早期定居的历史如何继续定义他们,并决定他们作为公民的存在和潜力。他们的种族往往是他们被承认、社会角色被分配、地位被授予、能力被确定和代理被行使的基础(James, 2010;p . 285)。因此,本期特刊的撰稿人旨在通过研究,让我们超越对EDID主张和倡议的表面或情感反应,建立我们对解决加拿大社会中生活和经历的反黑人种族主义的理解(Jean-Pierre &詹姆斯,2020)。由黑人学者作为唯一或主要作者撰写的期刊文章和致力于社会学的英文和法文论文,反映了黑人生活的异质性和细微差别,以及加拿大黑人经历的复杂性和异质性。这期特刊的文章涉及政策、移民、教育和警务等各种主题,从国家到地方范围,从理论、反思和经验的角度反映了各省的现实。莫林·基希卡(Maureen Kihika)博士的第一篇文章对多元文化主义政策未能涵盖和保护黑人的自由和权利进行了深入分析。她认为,制度化的多元文化主义掩盖了加拿大黑人的社会建构、从属和边缘化。在第二篇文章中,Oral Robinson博士批判性地考察了黑人肯定教学法在高等教育中的潜力。从反种族主义、反殖民主义和以黑人为中心的视角出发,他详细阐述了黑人肯定教学法是如何肯定黑人、归属感、变革行动、多种知识来源、团结、盟友关系以及课堂上教师和学生的人性的。在第三篇文章中,Natalie Deckard博士、Camisha Sibblis博士和Kemi Salawu Anazodo博士比较了非裔加拿大人基于移民世代身份的逃避执法行为。利用加拿大统计局的综合社会调查数据,他们的定量分析表明,加拿大的社会化对于理解不同移民世代加拿大黑人对执法的不信任和回避的差异至关重要。在第四篇文章中,蒂莫西·布莱恩博士研究了警察对影响加拿大黑人的种族仇恨犯罪的反应。通过一项定性研究,他展示了尽管加拿大黑人继续遭受种族定性和警察过度使用武力,但当黑人成为仇恨犯罪的受害者时,执法部门的调查努力是如何缺乏的。最后两篇文章是用法语写的。在第五篇文章中,Johanne Jean-Pierre博士的文章揭示了关键的希望如何塑造了讲英语和讲法语的加拿大黑人对教育变革的渴望。基于在新斯科舍省进行的一项双语定性研究,她展示了物质希望、苏格拉底希望和大胆希望——教育中批判性希望的关键组成部分(Duncan-Andrade, 2009)——是如何在非洲裔新斯科舍省人和黑人移民的叙述中发现的。在最后一篇文章中,莱拉·萨尔博士及其合作者讨论了选择加入加拿大全国各地法语少数民族社区的法语黑人移民的经历。从批判性种族理论和定性方法中,他们表明,种族民族主义和未能解决反黑人种族主义与官方的包容性话语相矛盾。这些文章举例说明了审视黑人生活的多种方式,从政策到高等教育的教学法,到执法部门与加拿大黑人之间的关系,学校教育,移民以及种族和语言的交叉性。承诺社会学论文讨论黑人团结,美学,企业家精神,政治社会学和种族化的劳动条件。第一篇文章是加拿大社会学协会黑人核心小组指导委员会和共同创始成员的集体论文,讨论了加拿大社会学协会黑人核心小组的起源和必要作用。雪莉·安妮·塔特博士,加拿大女权主义研究主席;交叉性,是第二篇文章的作者这篇文章讨论了美的社会建构如何不是种族中立的而是,主导的美规范是由反黑人塑造的。第三份贡献是由Amos Nkrumah博士撰写的,他讨论了反黑人种族主义如何在草原地区黑人移民企业家的社会互动和商业成果中发挥作用。在第四篇文章中,Prentiss A. Dantzler博士研究了黑人政治运动(如Black Lives Matter, BLM)如何使黑人社区重新想象城市空间和生活。同样,博士。 安妮-玛丽·利文斯通专注于政治社会学,并强调研究种族政治、公共机构和挑战种族主义政策和做法的切实举措的重要性。在最后一篇文章中,Claudine Bonner博士回顾了20世纪初新斯科舍省黑人钢铁工人因反黑人种族主义而受到的差别待遇。随着联合国非洲人后裔国际十年(2015-2024年)的展开,社会学家应该注意甚至传授联合国人权理事会(2017年)向加拿大政府提出的建议。其中一项建议规定,政府机构必须收集基于种族的数据,以解决现有的差距和不平等模式。这些数据不应仅用于描述性或差异分析,而应为各机构的具体政策和实践提供信息。从社会学的几个领域来看,从加拿大黑人的角度来看,还有许多主题有待于在理论和经验上进行调查(Jean-Pierre &McCready, 2019)。无论所进行的研究是研究微观、中观还是宏观层面的问题,具有区域或国家范围,是用英语和/或法语进行的,我们建议研究人员与受其研究影响的黑人社区合作并为其服务。我们还应该质疑我们在本科和研究生课程中用来教授加拿大黑人的教学策略和资源,比如指定阅读材料。通过加拿大黑人的经历和观点来了解社会是有价值的。这样说,我们只是在重申社会学家W.E.B.杜波依斯(W.E.B. Du Bois, 1897)在一个多世纪前所说的话,即来自非洲的黑人和散居的非洲人作为一个社会群体,对人类做出了独特的贡献,这是其他群体无法取代的。因此,除了分析和挑战种族主义,我们认为,通过以加拿大黑人的声音为中心的研究,有一些重要的见解可以照亮我们对加拿大社会和人性的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Black life, complexities, nuances, and insights

This was Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's communiqué to Canadians on Emancipation Day, August 1, 2022. As such, one would expect that hearing such assertion from the Prime Minister, then under his leadership, we would have seen the unsatisfactory social, economic, educational, employment, and health conditions of Black Canadians being addressed knowing the historical “legacy of systemic anti-Black racism.” But it might be that such language is reflective of the current context in which worldwide protests following the murder of George Floyd (May 25, 2020) by a Minneapolis police officer in the US1 and the racial reckoning that it generated, have resulted in a discourse of “Equity, Diversity, Inclusion and Decolonization” (EDID). This discourse espoused by educational institutions, social agencies, business establishments, and government bureaucracies is taken to be an indication of their commitment to addressing the needs, interests, expectations, and aspirations of racialized members of society that they serve or are expected to serve.

Indigenous and Black Canadians are two racialized groups that have been identified as needing special or purposeful measures by which they would be able to gain access to employment, education, social, health and other services. Indeed, data have long shown that Indigenous and Black people continue to experience barriers to their participation in these areas; and as such, tend to be under-represented (Briggs, 2018; James, 2021; Thompson, 2018), even as legislation, policies, reports and programs like Multiculturalism (1971), Employment Equity (1984), Truth and Reconciliation (2015) and other such mechanisms are thought to signal governments’, businesses’, and institutions’ commitment – and that of society generally – to accommodating and responding to the needs, concerns, issues and challenges of minoritized Canadians. But clearly, these mechanisms have failed to change the situation for these Canadians because if they did, there would be no need for today's education and employment initiatives to specifically identify Indigenous and Black people. In other words, if indeed, all minoritized or racialized people were benefitting from the promise of multiculturalism and Employment Equity policies and programs, then today's EDID initiatives would not have had to specially target Black people.

Why only in recent years – particularly during this period of racial reckoning – are Canadians prepared to recruit Black and Indigenous peoples into their establishments through EDID initiatives? A possible answer to this question might be that historically Canadians – socialized by their institutions – have maintained that unlike the United States, it is “culture” (typically attributed to being immigrants) and not “race” that accounts for the differences among ethnoracial group members. Underlying this notion is the colonial discourse of color-blindness structured on the whiteness of the European settler colonial project; and which has operated in the erasure, enslavement, cultural genocide, and segregation of Indigenous people (Clarke & Whitt, 2019; Dion, 2022; Tuck & Yang, 2012; Wolfe, 2006); as well as in the capture, enslavement, exclusion, segregation of African/Black people (Backhouse, 1999; Dei, 2017; Walker, 2008). Essentially, Canada's settler colonial project has contributed to a situation in which Black, like Indigenous, peoples have been subjected to a racialization system that “robbed them of their humanity and encased them in a culture of whiteness with education as a major instrument of assimilation” (James forthcoming); and for Black people that racialization is understood as anti-Black racism.

Addressing the formidable modality of anti-Black racism requires that we disaggregate the group of people that Canada refers to as “visible minority;” thereby giving consideration to the particular experiences of Black people; and in doing so, give attention to the intersection of race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexuality, language, dis/ability, and other identifications. It requires that we examine Black experiences as not solely determined through the lens of immigration (status or generation), which is often the case in many studies (Thésée & Carr, 2016). It also involves acknowledging the pervasiveness of anti-Black racism in several settings and domains: criminal justice system (Bernard & Smith, 2018; Samuels-Wortley, 2019), child welfare (Antwi-Boasiako et al., 2020; Boatswain-Kyte et al., 2022), education (Briggs, 2018; James, 2021; Jean-Pierre, 2021; Kamanzi, 2021), health (Public Health Agency of Canada, 2020), labor market (Hasford, 2016; Madibbo, 2021; Sall, 2021), and the environment (Waldron, 2018).

Sociology provides a lens through which we can excavate the consequences of systemic anti-Black racism and how the history of Black people's early settlement in Canadian society as enslaved people continues to define them and dictate their presence and potential as citizens. And their race is often the basis upon which they are acknowledged, social roles are assigned, status is conferred, competency is determined, and agency is exercised (James, 2010; p. 285). As such, contributors to this special edition aim to move us beyond surface or emotional reactions to EDID claims and initiatives using research to build our understanding toward addressing anti-Black racism as it is lived and experienced in Canadian society (Jean-Pierre & James, 2020). The journal articles and the Committing Sociology essays in English and French, by Black scholars as sole or lead authors, reflect the heterogenous and nuances of Black life, as well as the complexity and heterogeneity of the Black experience in Canada.

The articles in this special issue touch upon various topics such as policy, immigration, education, and policing, spanning from national to local scopes, and reflecting realities from various provinces with theoretical, reflexive, and empirical approaches. The first article from Dr. Maureen Kihika presents an informed analysis of the policy of multiculturalism's failure to encompass and protect Black people's freedoms and rights. She argues that institutionalized multiculturalism obscures the social construction, subordination and marginalization of Black Canadians. In the second article, Dr. Oral Robinson examines critically the potential of Black affirming pedagogy in higher education. Drawing from antiracist, anticolonial and Blackcentricity lenses, he elaborates on how Black affirming pedagogies affirm Blackness, belonging, action for change, multiple sources of knowledge, solidarity,allyship, and the humanity of instructors and students in the classroom. In the third article, Dr. Natalie Deckard, Dr. Camisha Sibblis and Dr. Kemi Salawu Anazodo compare avoidance behaviors towards law enforcement based on immigration generation status among African Canadians. Using Statistics Canada General Social Survey data, their quantitative analysis shows how socialization in Canada is critical to understand the differences in distrust and avoidance towards law enforcement among different immigrant generations of Black Canadians. In the fourth article, Dr. Timothy Bryan examines police responses to racially motivated hate crimes that affect Black Canadians. Drawing from a qualitative study, he demonstrates how although Black Canadians continue to experience racial profiling and police excessive force, law enforcement’ investigative efforts are lacking when Black people are victims of hate crimes.

The last two articles are in French. In the fifth article, Dr. Johanne Jean-Pierre's article reveals how critical hope shapes English-speaking and French-speaking Black Canadians’ aspirations for change in education. Based on a bilingual qualitative study conducted in Nova Scotia, she shows how material hope, Socratic hope and audacious hope, key components of critical hope in education (Duncan-Andrade, 2009), are found among African Nova Scotians and Black immigrants’ narratives alike. In the last article, Dr. Leyla Sall and collaborators discuss the experiences of Francophone Black immigrants who choose to join Canadian francophone minority communities across the country. Drawing from critical race theory and a qualitative approach, they show that ethnic nationalism and the failure to address anti-Black racism contradict the official discourse of inclusivity. These articles exemplify the multiple ways of examining Black life, from policy, to pedagogy in higher education, to the relationship between law enforcement and Black Canadians, schooling, immigration, and the intersectionality of race and language.

The Committing Sociology essays discuss Black solidarity, aesthetics, entrepreneurship, political sociology, and racialized labor conditions. The first contribution is a collective essay from the steering committee and co-founding members of the Canadian Sociological Association Black Caucus that discuss the origin and the necessary role of the CSA Black Caucus. Dr. Shirley Anne Tate, Canada Research Chair in Feminism & Intersectionality, is the author of the second essay which discusses how the social construction of beauty is not race-neutral but rather, that dominant beauty norms are shaped by anti-Blackness. The third contribution is authored by Dr. Amos Nkrumah where he discusses how anti-Black racism plays a role in the social interactions and business outcomes of Black immigrant entrepreneurs in the Prairies. In the fourth contribution, Dr. Prentiss A. Dantzler examines how Black political movements, such as Black Lives Matter (BLM), enable Black communities to re-imagine urban space and life. Similarly, Dr. Anne-Marie Livingstone focuses on political sociology and emphasizes the importance of studying racial politics, public institutions, and tangible initiatives that challenge racist policies and practices. In the last essay, Dr. Claudine Bonner takes a retrospective look at Black steelworkers’ differential treatment in Nova scotia during the early 20th century due to anti-Black racism.

As the United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent (2015-2024) is unfolding, sociologists should take heed and even teach about the recommendations of the United Nations Human Rights Council (2017) directed to the Canadian government. One of these recommendations stipulates the necessity of the collection of race-based data by government agencies in order to address existing gaps and patterns of inequality. Such data should not be used solely for descriptive or discrepancy analysis, but to inform tangible policies and practices across institutions. There are many topics that remain to be investigated theoretically and empirically from the point of view of Black Canadians regarding several areas in sociology (Jean-Pierre & McCready, 2019). Whether the research undertaken examines micro-, meso- or macro-level issues, has a regional or national scope, is conducted in English and/or in French, we advise that researchers work with and for the Black communities affected by their research. We should also interrogate the pedagogical strategies and resources, such as the assigned readings, that we mobilize to teach about Black Canadians in undergraduate and graduate courses. There is value in learning about society through the experiences and viewpoints of Black Canadians. In saying this, we are simply reiterating what sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois (1897) asserted more than a century ago, that Black people from Africa and the African diaspora have a unique contribution to make to humanity as a social group which no other group can make in their stead. Thus, beyond analyzing and challenging racism, we contend that there are critical insights that can illuminate our understanding of Canadian society and humanity through research that centers Black Canadian voices.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
11.10%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: The Canadian Review of Sociology/ Revue canadienne de sociologie is the journal of the Canadian Sociological Association/La Société canadienne de sociologie. The CRS/RCS is committed to the dissemination of innovative ideas and research findings that are at the core of the discipline. The CRS/RCS publishes both theoretical and empirical work that reflects a wide range of methodological approaches. It is essential reading for those interested in sociological research in Canada and abroad.
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