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ahupp | 1 year ago

That stat alone doesn't tell us if the disparity is due to different rates if criminal behavior, or different treatment by the system. A useful check is to look at murder victimization rates, since a) murder is almost always reported, and b) most murders are intra-racial.

The doc you linked says 39% of inmates are First Nations, and this[0] says they are 37% of Alberta murder victims.

Of course this isn't saying that there isn't inequality in the system, but just that happens before someone gets sentenced.

[0] https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/t1/tbl1/en/tv.action?pid=351001...

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TaylorAlexander|1 year ago

We could further ask why racialized minorities might have higher crime rates, such as how those people have been treated by society and the state.

rayiner|1 year ago

But that’s unrelated to the “racism” comment above. European Canadians came and destroyed the indigenous Canadian population, scattered their population and upended their societies. But Canadians today might treat indigenous people without any prejudice.

Generally speaking, crime isn’t a matter of economics. My dad’s village in Bangladesh in the 1950s—when 1/4 of kids died before the age of five—was safer then than Toronto is today.

cbsmith|1 year ago

Worth keeping in mind that even a lot of these cases weren't treated as murder...

bee_rider|1 year ago

Why else would different races have different rates of criminal behavior?

dotnet00|1 year ago

Historical socioeconomic factors, things that aren't fixed within a handful of generations

inglor_cz|1 year ago

For all sorts of reasons?

British Pakistanis and British Hindus look basically the same, especially to a naive native European, but the groups are internally different enough to be on the opposite ends of the British societal ladder in all sorts of attributes - education, wealth, crime rate etc.