Nicole Leonard, Author at The McGill Daily https://www.mcgilldaily.com/author/nicoleleonard/ Montreal I Love since 1911 Wed, 17 Jul 2013 16:08:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://www.mcgilldaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/cropped-logo2-32x32.jpg Nicole Leonard, Author at The McGill Daily https://www.mcgilldaily.com/author/nicoleleonard/ 32 32 In solidarity with California’s prisoner hunger strike https://www.mcgilldaily.com/2013/07/in-solidarity-with-californias-prisoner-hunger-strike/ Wed, 17 Jul 2013 16:08:27 +0000 http://www.mcgilldaily.com/?p=31566 Montreal activists decry solitary confinement

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Activists gathered in Montreal on Saturday afternoon to stand in solidarity with thousands of inmates on hunger strike across California prisons.

Roughly ten participants stood on the steps of Christ Church Cathedral, holding a banner that read “Pour un monde sans patrons, Ni Flics, Ni Prisons” – roughly, “For A World Without Bosses, Neither Cops, Nor Prisons” – and handing out pamphlets with information about the strike and the prison-industrial complex to passers-by on Ste. Catherine.

The hunger strike – organized by a group of inmates at Pelican Bay State Prison, a supermax prison in California known for its wide use of solitary confinement – is reported to be the largest strike of its kind in the state’s history.

While an estimated 30,000 inmates began refusing meals last Monday, numbers are substantially lower in the strike’s second week, and officials continue to threaten disciplinary action.

One of the strike’s primary demands is to end solitary confinement, a punitive practice whereby inmates are held alone in a windowless cell, measuring 7 by 11 feet, for 22.5 hours a day. The strike also seeks to abolish the process used to put prisoners in indefinite solitary confinement for suspected gang affiliation – a process that in many cases falsely or arbitrarily proves gang affiliation.

Other key demands are for adequate food, constructive programming, and an end to collective punishments for individual actions. These are the same five demands as those of California’s 2011 prison strike, one that resulted in very little meaningful reform.

Carl Small, an organizer of the Montreal event who is in contact with California prisoners and who was active during the 2011 strike, described the security housing units (SHUs) used for solitary confinement as “a means of control.” He cited vast overcrowding and unconstitutional medical care, which have both prompted federal intervention, as indicators of the state’s overextended system.

While Small was quick to point out the unique nature of the U.S. prison system, he expressed concerns about prison expansion in Canada. “Because of a kind of institutional creep and a culture of incarceration, and because the U.S. is such a centre of gravity in North America, there’s definitely spillover effects.”

Indeed, the use of solitary confinement in Canadian prisons appears to be rising. One man in attendance who spent 12 years in solitary confinement in Ontario, Michael Tremblay, described its conditions as “terrible,” stating that he had no window in his cell and had only been outside twice in that period.

When asked about the potential for prison reform, Small was skeptical, arguing that the system operates through “a broader push to incarcerate” and “starts with certain assumptions about the kind of people who will be convicted.”

“We have to start thinking about the problem not from ‘okay we have prisons as one of our tools,’ but we have to start before that,” he said.

At around 2:20 p.m., after an hour of action, the police disbanded the demonstration and the attendees dispersed peacefully.

Read more on the hunger strikes and solitary confinement in the California prison system.

Solitary Watch
Strike the Prisons
Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity
A Special Report on Solitary Confinement from Former Hostage Shane Bauer

 

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Too few women and minorities in leadership roles, report says https://www.mcgilldaily.com/2013/02/too-few-women-and-minorities-in-leadership-roles-report-says/ Sat, 16 Feb 2013 11:00:15 +0000 http://www.mcgilldaily.com/?p=29289 Corporate sector least diverse

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Women and visible minorities are underrepresented in senior leadership positions across Montreal, according to a report published by Ryerson University’s Diversity Institute and the Desautels Faculty of Management at McGill.

The report – part of DiversityLeads, a five-year, $2.5-million project funded by the federal Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) – aims to “benchmark and assess the progress of diversity in leadership” to develop specific solutions to advance diversity across Canada. It examined six sectors: elected, public, private, education, voluntary, and appointments to Agencies, Boards and Commissions.

The study found that women accounted for 31.2 per cent of senior leadership positions, despite comprising 51.7 per cent of the population of surveyed areas in greater Montreal.

The figure for visible minorities was even lower, standing at only 5.9 per cent, despite visible minorities comprising 22.5 per cent of the population. The problem compounds itself for women that are visible minorities, who represent 11.5 per cent of the population, but only hold 1.9 per cent of leadership positions.

The corporate sector was found to be the least diverse, with women at 15.1 per cent and minorities at 2.6 per cent. By comparison, the government and education sectors both had over 40 per cent women, with 9.6 and 6.4 per cent visible minorities, respectively.

Wendy Cukier, founder and director of the Diversity Institute at Ryerson University and a lead researcher on the project, highlighted the significance of the sector-based approach to this research in an email to The Daily.

In a phone interview with The Daily, Suzanne Gagnon, another researcher on the project and a professor of organizational behaviour at Desautels, warned that sector averages should not necessarily be taken at face value, and that there is often a wide range of representation within sectors. She suggested that certain organizations could act as models for others within the same sector.

She explained that phase two of the research would include a cross-sectoral survey and case studies to discover specific reasons for, and solutions to, the problem.

Gagnon emphasized the benefits of addressing this underrepresentation. “Diversity at the top of an organization has been linked to a company or organization’s ability to retain top talent, and also as a separate issue – although they are linked to an extent – to innovate, to make innovative and creative decisions drawing on multiple perspectives.”

She also explained that, “it matters for young people and for [their] aspirations and for social inclusion more generally to have leaders who broadly represent the population.”

Elizabeth Groeneveld, a faculty lecturer and chair of the Women’s Studies program at McGill, explained that underrepresentation in leadership in Montreal is likely linked to broader systemic racism and sexism.

“There can be impediments in terms of access to education and the kind of mentoring that is often given to men or people who are racialized as white [that] is not always extended in the same way to women and visible minorities,” said Groeneveld.

Gagnon, in reference to both the corporate sector and as a general trend, described how organizations are “self-reproducing entities” that tend to operate as they always have, which becomes a systemic obstacle to introducing women and visible minorities.

Groeneveld echoed this idea: “The language of being ‘the right fit’ for a company can sometimes become code for people who look like us, think like us, and talk like us.”

Cukier noted that several other projects are in progress as part of DiversityLeads, including studies on the representation of Aboriginal people, persons with disabilities, and members of LGBT communities, as well as analysis on the impact of representations of leadership in media. Gagnon mentioned that similar studies were also conducted in other major Canadian cities, including Vancouver and Toronto.

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