造成的伤害:代际责任的叙事

IF 0.3 Q3 LAW ALBERTA LAW REVIEW Pub Date : 2019-03-25 DOI:10.29173/ALR2526
M. Hough
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引用次数: 4

摘要

独立评估程序源于《印度寄宿学校和解协议》,是一个为在印度寄宿学校遭受性虐待和身体虐待的前学生提供金钱补偿的项目。作为独立评估程序听证会上的“加拿大代表”,提交人当时是一名年轻的律师,她亲眼目睹了对索赔人实施的行为,这些行为让她感到不安。是的,她对所听到的情况感到不安,但也认为这一过程并不能满足所有索赔人的需求,也不符合她作为非土著加拿大人的责任感。作者将她作为“加拿大代表”的经历和观察交织在一起,探讨加拿大环境中的代际正义,以及哪些过程可以为处理印度寄宿学校遗产提供更完整的方法。首先,她探讨了印度寄宿学校背景下的现有争端解决框架,即刑事、侵权和替代争端解决机制。她指出,这些机制在解决印度寄宿学校的一些危害方面确实具有优势,但她最终表示,这些机制固有的法律局限性使其不足以为受害者提供补救,也不足以让社会更广泛地参与进来。作者接着定义了过渡时期司法,阐述了其既定原则和主题,并通过借鉴澳大利亚、新西兰和美国的例子,开始阐述加拿大将这些原则应用于印度寄宿学校政策的情况。这些原则已成为推动和解和加拿大社会目标的创新工具。然而,正如作者所指出的,他们并非没有自己的缺陷,这可能会影响加拿大人——尤其是非土著加拿大人——对其合法性的看法。最后,作者分析了社会责任的主流观点,为加拿大的代际正义提供了规范基础。她最后主张加拿大人在继续努力解决印度寄宿学校的遗留问题时,从内疚和指责的立场转向广泛承担责任的立场。
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The Harms Caused: A Narrative of Intergenerational Responsibility
Born out of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement, the Independent Assessment Process is a program that provides monetary compensation to former students who suffered sexual and physical abuse at Indian Residential Schools. As “Canada’s Representative” during hearings of the Independent Assessment Process, this author, a young lawyer at the time, bore witness to grizzly accounts of acts perpetrated against claimants that left her unsettled. Unsettled by what was heard, yes, but also in her observations that the process did not satisfy the needs of all claimants, nor did it engage with her own sense of responsibility as a non-Indigenous Canadian. The author weaves together her experiences and observations as “Canada’s Representative” to explore intergenerational justice in a Canadian setting, and what processes might offer a more complete approach in handling the Indian Residential Schools legacy. First, shecanvasses the existing framework of dispute settlement in the context of Indian Residential Schools, namely criminal, tort, and alternative dispute resolution mechanisms. While pointing out the strengths these mechanisms do have to address some of the harms of Indian Residential Schools, she ultimately suggests their inherent legal limitations make them inadequate tools to provide redress to victims and engage society more broadly. The author goes on to define transitional justice, set out its established tenets and themes, and begins to map out a Canadian application of these principles to the Indian Residential Schools policy by drawing on examples from Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. These principles take shape as innovative instruments for advancing the goals of reconciliation and of Canadian society. They are not without their own flaws, however, as the author also points out, that may affect how Canadians—in particular, non-Indigenous Canadians—view their legitimacy. Lastly, the author analyzes prevailing views of societal responsibility to provide a normative underpinning for intergenerational justice in a Canadian context. She concludes by advocating Canadians move from a stance of guilt and blame toward one of a broad assumption of responsibility as they continue to grapple with the legacy of Indian Residential Schools.
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