Biased Impartiality: A Survey of Post-RDS caselaw on Bias, Race and Indigeneity

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Biased Impartiality: A Survey of Post-RDS caselaw on Bias, Race and Indigeneity
Abstract
Based on an empirical review of post-RDS caselaw, I argue that there is a demonstrable colour blindness within the existing jurisprudence on judicial impartiality. I illustrate this colour blind approach through two arguments. The first argument is based on the evidence needed to pierce the veil of judicial impartiality. A large number of the cases surveyed illustrate the propensity of decision makers to deny recusal arguments based on the cogency of the evidence. In these cases of colour blind decision making, the presented evidence was deemed insufficient to warrant piercing the veil of judicial impartiality. The second argument focuses on judges that adopt an antiracist perspective. When judges have relied on social science evidence to engage in contextual and antiracist judging, they have been policed and their decisions overturned by supervisory and appellate courts.
Publication
The Canadian Bar Review
Volume
99
Issue
2
Date
2021-09-02
Language
en
ISSN
0008-3003
Short Title
BIASED IMPARTIALITY
Accessed
8/30/23, 1:33 AM
Library Catalog
Rights
Copyright (c) 2021 The Canadian Bar Foundation
Extra
Number: 2
Citation
Xavier, S. (2021). Biased Impartiality: A Survey of Post-RDS caselaw on Bias, Race and Indigeneity. The Canadian Bar Review, 99(2). https://cbr.cba.org/index.php/cbr/article/view/4698
Author / Editor