학술논문

Mapping Racial Geographies of Violence on the Colonial Landscape
Document Type
article
Source
The Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, Vol 38 (2022)
Subject
Law
Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. Jurisprudence
K1-7720
Language
English
French
ISSN
2561-5017
Abstract
This paper unpacks the concept of “spatial violence” to examine the social justice dimensions of race, place, space, and the Indigenous and Black communities in Canada. The paper highlights the larger socio-spatial processes that create disproportionate exposure and vulnerability to the harmful social, economic, and health impacts of inequality in Indigenous and Black communities. It also argues that the lived experience of spatial violence and toxic exposure live together and that it is not possible to understand their impacts in Indigenous and Black communities in isolation. The paper also disrupts traditional notions of “the environment” that are centered on harmonizing cities and nature by highlighting the symbolic and materiality of space, especially with respect to how it harms Indigenous, Black and other racialized communities.