• About
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Contact
Monday, November 10, 2025
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
The Brief
NB MEDIA CO-OP
Events
Share a story
  • Articles en français
  • New Brunswick
  • Canada
  • World
  • Environment
  • Indigenous
  • Labour
  • Gender
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Videos
  • NB debrief
  • Articles en français
  • New Brunswick
  • Canada
  • World
  • Environment
  • Indigenous
  • Labour
  • Gender
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Videos
  • NB debrief
No Result
View All Result
NB MEDIA CO-OP
No Result
View All Result
Home New Brunswick

Canada’s criminal legal system is unjust: Senator Kim Pate [video]

Building more jails will not make Canada safer, says longtime advocate

by Arun Budhathoki
February 16, 2023
Reading Time: 2min read
Canada’s criminal legal system is unjust: Senator Kim Pate [video]

Independent Senator Kim Pate. Photo via Twitter.

Independent Senator Kim Pate says that Canada’s criminal legal system is unjust, discriminatory and biased against Indigenous people and people of colour. 

Pate has already spent over six years in Canada’s Senate, working on eliminating mandatory minimum penalties, extensively focusing on Canadian prisons and the criminal legal system. Before that, she spent decades as an advocate, particularly for incarcerated people.

From 1992 until her Senate appointment, Fry was the Executive Director of the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies.

“If we want to create a more just legal system and prison system, then we have to start with ensuring there’s more equitable access to everything from clean water, housing, education, food security, health care, and economic security overall,” Pate said. 

Pate is committed to her work: “Part of what I see my responsibility to do, particularly in the Senate, is to shore up and ensure that we have equitable social, health and economic systems in this country so that every person has an opportunity to self-actualize and to get an education, to contribute to the community in a way that makes sense for them and in accordance with their skills, interests and abilities.”

Check out the full interview here:

Jails and prisons not a solution 

Fredericton city council recently voted in favour of rezoning an area of the city to house a new provincial jail. 

Pate said the New Brunswick government should have invested the resources in the community to benefit all citizens in New Brunswick rather than very few, like correctional officers.

Pate commented: “I think it’s, unfortunately, very short-sighted on the part of the government.”

On January 25, Pate delivered the 43rd Viscount Bennett Memorial Lecture at the University of New Brunswick Law School in Fredericton. Her talk was titled, “Why and How We Need to Decolonize, Decriminalize and Decarcerate.”

You can check out the talk, along with a Q&A, here:

Arun Budhathoki is a video-journalist with the NB Media Co-op. This project has been made possible in part by the Government of Canada, administered by the Canadian Association of Community Television Stations and Users (CACTUS).

Tags: Arun Budhathokicarceral statecriminal justice systemdecolonizationjailKim Pateprisonprison abolition
Send

Related Posts

Fredericton forum highlights path forward for a more inclusive community
New Brunswick

Fredericton forum highlights path forward for a more inclusive community

June 24, 2025

“Systemic racism is like the air that we breathe. We live it everyday and if it works for you, you...

Five hundred people take to Halifax’s streets in support of the Wet’suwet’en
Climate change

Can climate action be decolonized?

November 4, 2024

When Indigenous scholars Eve Tuck and Wayne Yang famously wrote: "decolonization is not a metaphor," they meant that true decolonization...

We need to answer the right questions before building a new prison
New Brunswick

We need to answer the right questions before building a new prison

May 28, 2024

In December 2021, the Government of New Brunswick announced its intention to build a new prison to add to the...

A young man with short dark hair is shown in a portrait photo.
Indigenous

Skyler Sappier’s family fights for justice after jail outbreak led to COVID death [video]

October 30, 2023

It was on Loyalist Day — May 18, 2023 — at the courthouse in “the loyalist city” of Saint John...

Load More

Recommended

Terry Jones (left), holding a microphone, and Juliette Bulmer (right), sitting side-by-side during the community meeting. They are seated in chairs in a rustic, wooden barn setting.

Gas plant concerns dominate community meeting in Upper Sackville

2 days ago
Two women standing next to a colorful Day of the Dead (Día de Muertos) altar in a room decorated for the event.

Day of the Dead celebrations in Esgenoôpetitj and Fredericton honour migrant workers who died in Canada

5 days ago
‘People will not live on their knees and die in silence,’ says Palestinian activist on colonialism and liberation

‘People will not live on their knees and die in silence,’ says Palestinian activist on colonialism and liberation

2 days ago
A modern, multi-story building in Dieppe with light and dark siding. The ground floor features commercial businesses, including a clinic and programming school, with apartments on the upper floors.

A sprinkler and a prayer: Wheelchair user fears the worst in case of fire

5 days ago
NB Media Co-op

© 2019 NB Media Co-op. All rights reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Contact
  • Share a Story
  • Calendar
  • Archives

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Contact
  • Events
  • Share a Story
  • COVID-19
  • Videos
  • New Brunswick
  • Canada
  • World
  • Arts & Culture
  • Environment
  • Indigenous
  • Labour
  • Politics
  • Rural

© 2019 NB Media Co-op. All rights reserved.

X
Did you like this article? Support the NB Media Co-op! Vous avez aimé cet article ? Soutenez la Coop Média NB !
Join/Donate