Unit 3: Confronting Systemic Anti-Black Racism in Canada
Week 8 – Day 2 – The Punitive State: Policing of Black Bodies from Childhood to Adulthood
Today is a LIVE class day! We will be meeting in our Virtual Classroom on Blackboard. See you there!
Today we will be having a group discussion about the readings for this week. Think about the following questions and be prepared to discuss as a class and in small groups:
- Robyn Maynard, Policing Black Lives
- Chapter Three: Arrested (In)justice (pages 83-113)
- Think about your own encounters and/or relationship with the police. How has it shaped your perception of policing? Has it changed after reading the chapter?
- How do Racial Profiling and surveillance play a part in who is viewed as criminals? Give Examples.
- Maynard Describes policing practices as “self-fulfilling prophecies” What does she mean by this?
- Chapter Five: Misogynoir in Canada (pages 128-157)
- Why is an intersectional lens important to understanding anti-black racism and how can it be useful in evaluating the experiences of black gender non-conforming people?
- Chapter Three: Arrested (In)justice (pages 83-113)
- Lockhart, P.R. (2019, May 16). A new report shows how racism and bias deny black girls their childhoods. Vox. [link]
- Lockhart highlights how Black girls are not afforded the privileges of childhood. What are some examples of these privileges? How does the absence of these privileges affect black childhood?
- How does the adultification bias affect the way black children are treated by institutions? Provide examples