TY - CONF
T1 - Race, Courts and Tribunals: Emerging Doctrines and Their Impact
AU - Permaul, Grace Allison
AU - Williams, Michelle Y.
N1 - Grace Alison Permaul & Michelle Williams, Race, Courts and Tribunals: Emerging Doctrines and Their Impact (Toronto: Dept of Continuing Legal Education, Law Society of Upper Canada, 2000).
PY - 2000/1/1
Y1 - 2000/1/1
N2 - Critical Race theorists were attracted to the CLS movement because it challenged liberal concepts about the" neutrality" and" objectivity" of law and because it recognized the fact that law legitimates existing" maldistributions" of wealth and power. However, in the end, Critical Race theorists rejected CLS because of its refusal or inability to recognize the central role that race and racism play in law, as well as the movement's failure to give credit to the experiences of people of colour. Critical Race theorists also rejected the CLS view of rights discourse and its disinclina-tion to use law as a tool against oppression and subordination. This book documents how Canadian Critical Race theorists are beginning to develop a body of thought designed to move us beyond theory to practical applications. Canadian Black lawyers and others are gradually beginning to seriously consider the role of race in litigation and to de-velop effective" Critical Race Litigation"(CRL) strategies to address the issue. As demonstrated by cases such as R. v. RDS (1994), R. v. Parks (1993), R. v. Williams (1998) and R. v. Cole (D)(1996),'these strategies are increasingly placing issues of race before the Canadian courts.
AB - Critical Race theorists were attracted to the CLS movement because it challenged liberal concepts about the" neutrality" and" objectivity" of law and because it recognized the fact that law legitimates existing" maldistributions" of wealth and power. However, in the end, Critical Race theorists rejected CLS because of its refusal or inability to recognize the central role that race and racism play in law, as well as the movement's failure to give credit to the experiences of people of colour. Critical Race theorists also rejected the CLS view of rights discourse and its disinclina-tion to use law as a tool against oppression and subordination. This book documents how Canadian Critical Race theorists are beginning to develop a body of thought designed to move us beyond theory to practical applications. Canadian Black lawyers and others are gradually beginning to seriously consider the role of race in litigation and to de-velop effective" Critical Race Litigation"(CRL) strategies to address the issue. As demonstrated by cases such as R. v. RDS (1994), R. v. Parks (1993), R. v. Williams (1998) and R. v. Cole (D)(1996),'these strategies are increasingly placing issues of race before the Canadian courts.
KW - Critical Race Theory
KW - CLS
KW - Racism in Law
KW - R v RDS
KW - R v Parks
KW - R v Williams
KW - R v Cole
KW - Supreme Court of Canada
UR - https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/1864
UR - https://dal.novanet.ca/permalink/01NOVA_DAL/1nek75v/alma990004071670107190
M3 - Presentation
ER -