Reconstructing Gladue

Author:

Ewing Benjamin1,Kerr Lisa2

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON, Canada.

2. Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON, Canada.

Abstract

Section 718.2(e) of the Criminal Code directs sentencing judges to exercise restraint in the use of incarceration ‘with particular attention to the circumstances of Aboriginal offenders.’ In R v Gladue, the Supreme Court of Canada interpreted this as a remedial provision aiming to reduce the incarceration of Indigenous people. That has made it appear to be a failure by its own lights. Yet to write off section 718.2(e) and the Gladue principles would be to fail properly to understand their moral foundations and structure. Judges are called upon to reduce the incarceration of Indigenous people neither by working backwards from prison demographic targets nor merely by combating implicit bias. Rather, Gladue requires judges to open their minds to hitherto unappreciated reasons that many Indigenous offenders should be afforded mitigation, restorative justice, and community-based accountability. One reason, we argue, relates to the unfair criminogenic disadvantages disproportionately faced by Indigenous offenders. Another reason is that the Canadian state’s complicity in such disadvantages calls into question its legitimate authority and its standing to blame Indigenous offenders. In sum, Gladue calls upon our courts to widen the horizon of fairness in their treatment of Indigenous people. This matters for its own sake in each and every case, whether or not it brings about an appreciable reduction in Indigenous incarceration in the aggregate. Our reconstruction of Gladue not only rescues it from cynical dismissals but also helps to solve the central doctrinal puzzles surrounding it: how Indigenous offenders’ unique life circumstances must be connected to their offences to be mitigating; how Gladue principles should apply differently to more and less serious offences; how a variant of Gladue principles should be extended to members of other disadvantaged groups such as Black Canadians; and how judges should weigh the interests of Indigenous victims when sentencing Indigenous offenders.

Publisher

University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science

Reference186 articles.

1. Criminal Code, RSC 1985, c C-46.

2. Ibid, s 718.2(e).

3. [1999] 1 SCR 688 at paras 24–65 [Gladue].

4. The percentage of federal inmates who are Indigenous has steadily and substantially increased – from 17.59 per cent in 2001 to 30.04 per cent in 2020. See Canada, Office of the Correctional Investigator, Annual Report of the Office of the Correctional Investigator 2019–2020, by Ivan Zinger (Ottawa: Correctional Investigator, 2020) at 20, online: Yet the percentage of Canadians who identify as Indigenous also increased dramatically over the same period – from 3.3 per cent of the population in 2001 to 5.0 per cent in 2021. See Statistics Canada, Aboriginal Peoples in Canada: First Nations People, Métis and Inuit (Ottawa: Statistics Canada, 25 July 2018), online: Statistics Canada, Indigenous Population Continues to Grow and Is Much Younger Than the Non-Indigenous Population, although the Pace of Growth Has Slowed (Ottawa: Statistics Canada, 21 September 2022), online: Consequently, growth in true Indigenous over-representation in custody (that is, the multiple by which the Indigenous percentage of the custodial population exceeds the Indigenous percentage of the overall population) appears much less dramatic and persistent than growth in the percentage of prisoners who are Indigenous. Moreover, even the increases in true over-representation that have occurred have not been the product of uniformly negative trends in Indigenous incarceration. The Department of Justice reports that the adult Indigenous federal incarceration rate declined by 2.2 per cent between 2006 and 2016, but because the adult non-Indigenous incarceration rate declined by 11.6 per cent, the Indigenous proportion of adult federal inmates increased significantly – from roughly 19 per cent to 26 per cent. See Canada, Department of Justice, JustFacts: Trends in Adult Federal Custody Populations (Ottawa: Research and Statistics Division, March 2018), online: [JustFacts: Trends]. For an even starker illustration of how over-representation can increase when downward trends in incarceration for non-Indigenous people simply outpace those for Indigenous people, consider that between 2019–20 and 2020–1, during the COVID-19 pandemic, even the absolute number of adult sentenced admissions to provincial/territorial custody fell by 35.9 per cent for Indigenous people. But because the number of such admissions fell by 49.4 per cent for non-Indigenous people, the Indigenous share of adult sentenced admissions to provincial/territorial custody increased substantially – from 29.6 per cent to 34.8 per cent in just one year. See Statistics Canada, Adult Custody Admissions to Correctional Services by Indigenous Identity, Table 35-10-0016-01 (Ottawa: Statistics Canada, 23 February 2023), online: Finally, we submit that there is also greater uncertainty about the extent of Indigenous incarceration and its change over time than is typically recognized for at least three reasons. First, to our knowledge, there has been no systematic government tracking of changes over time in true Indigenous over-representation in custody and only haphazard, incomplete reporting on actual Indigenous incarceration rates themselves. Second, the government has collected data both on self-reported Indigenous ‘ancestry’ and ‘identity’ and change in the apparent size of the Indigenous population reflects changes in Indigenous self-identification as well as the effects of lifespans and birthrates. Third, Gladue gives Indigenous people found guilty of crimes a reason to disclose their Indigenous identity to sentencing judges, which may have increased the likelihood, to some unknown degree, that they would also indicate their Indigenous identity in correctional surveys since Gladue.

5. Gladue, supra note 3 at para 93.

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