- Mettre en route la vidéo
- Cliquer sur l’icône « CC » (Sous-titre) en bas à droite
- Cliquer sur l’icône « Settings » (Paramètre) en bas à droite
- Cliquer sur «Subtitles » (Sous-titres)
- Cliquer sur « Auto-translate » (Traduire automatiquement)
- Sélectionner la langue de votre choix
Dr. El Jones Co-Writes Report on Defunding the Police
Professor of Political and Canadian Studies at Mount St. Vincent University, Dr. El Jones was asked to work on a report of recommendations for the Halifax Regional Police with regards to what defunding the police could actually look like. Dr. Jones sat down with President of Black Lives Matter New Brunswick Matthew Martin and Dr. Timothy Christie, co-hosts of NBWA: New Brunswickers Want Action on CHCO-TV to discuss the report and the impact it could have on communities across Canada, including in New Brunswick.
"I came to that work really through a history of activism and advocacy as well as for over a decade I've worked very closely with people in prisons and we provide connections to legal supports and court support," said Dr. Jones. "I've done a lot of the reintegration work that we need in community to try to connect people with housing, etc. I also do a lot of work intervening in deportation and with migrant workers, but also the other ways that people experience policing and criminalization at our borders. I also work with women who are experiencing violence or abuse in shelters or other sites, so I really came to this work from a deep immersion in what the impacts of trauma are--the ways that people are criminalized, and the sense that the systems that we have set up right now are not doing anything to intervene in harm and are not helping people heal."
The report that Jones helped co-write is 217 pages in length and it is extensively researched. It includes 36 recommendations as a starting point for how defunding the police might proceed if adapted by Canadian police forces. These recommendations are organized under four pillars and emerged in response to an extensive public consultation process. The research team used 2351 survey responses to inform the report and held a 6-hour public meeting with 19 presentations.
"We are fed a narrative, so people genuinely believe that you know if you get rid of the police there will be chaos, but we recommend is reallocating resources to better serve the community," said Dr. Jones.
Comment
Ajouter un commentaire
La télévision du comté de Charlotte est la seule source de télévision communautaire indépendante du Nouveau-Brunswick. Depuis 1993, CHCO-TV fournit au sud-ouest du Nouveau-Brunswick du contenu produit localement par la communauté qu'elle dessert.
La mission de CHCO-TV est de promouvoir les médias communautaires et d'encourager, d'éduquer et d'engager les résidents du sud-ouest du Nouveau-Brunswick, d'utiliser les nouveaux médias et la technologie, d'améliorer la participation civique, d'acquérir de nouvelles compétences médiatiques et d'améliorer la culture, l'économie, la santé et qualité de vie au Nouveau-Brunswick.
Commentaires
Nous encourageons les commentaires qui favorisent le dialogue sur les histoires que nous publions. Les commentaires seront modérés et publiés s'ils respectent ces lignes directrices:
Le portail des médias communautaires se réserve le droit de rejeter tout commentaire ne respectant pas ces normes minimales.