Race, Space, and the Law: Unmapping a White Settler Society

Front Cover
Sherene Razack
Between The Lines, 2002 - History - 310 pages

Race, Space, and the Law belongs to a growing field of exploration that spans critical geography, sociology, law, education, and critical race and feminist studies. Writers who share this terrain reject the idea that spaces, and the arrangement of bodies in them, emerge naturally over time. Instead, they look at how spaces are created and the role of law in shaping and supporting them. They expose hierarchies that emerge from, and in turn produce, oppressive spatial categories.

The authors' unmapping takes us through drinking establishments, parks, slums, classrooms, urban spaces of prostitution, parliaments, the main streets of cities, mosques, and the U.S.-Canada and U.S.-Mexico borders. Each example demonstrates that "place," as a Manitoba Court of Appeal judge concluded after analyzing a section of the Indian Act, "becomes race."

 

Contents

When Place Becomes Race
1
Colonization and Indigenous Resistance in Eastern Canada
21
MixedRace Identity Liquor and the Law in British Columbia 18501913
47
Women Memory and the Subjects of the Internment
71
Discourses of Racial Domination
99
The Murder of Pamela George
121
Mapping Laws Complicity in Manitobas Racialized Spaces
157
Struggles for Urban Citizenship in Diasporic Toronto
185
Creating Regulating and Remembering the Urban Slum
211
Race Space and the Emergence of Legalized Midwifery in Ontario
233
Notes
257
Bibliography
294
Index
297
Contributors
309
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2002)

Sherene Razack is a Professor in the Department of Sociology and Equity Studies, University of Toronto. She is the author and editor of a number of books, including Casting Out: The Eviction of Muslims from Western Law and Politics, and Race, Space, and the Law: Unmapping a White Settler Society.

Bibliographic information