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“R. v. Desjourdy: A Narrative of White Innocence and Racialized Danger”
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Jones, Danardo (Author)
- Sheehy, Elizabeth (Author)
Title
“R. v. Desjourdy: A Narrative of White Innocence and Racialized Danger”
Abstract
Ottawa police sergeant Steven Desjourdy was the first officer in Canada to be prosecuted for sexual assault based upon an illegal strip search of a woman, arguably a “sexual assault by the state.”1 Sexual assault prosecutions present innumerable hurdles for all complainants, but when the accused is a police officer engaged in his duties, those hurdles are almost insurmountable. The prospect of racism loomed large in this case, given that Desjourdy was white and SB was a Black Canadian woman portrayed as volatile and dangerous. Using the transcripts of Desjourdy’s trial and drawing upon sexual assault and critical race literatures, this article explores the systemic biases that favour police officers on trial and facilitate the construction of white innocence and racialized danger.
Publication
The Canadian Bar Review
Volume
99
Issue
3
Date
2021-12-15
Language
en
ISSN
0008-3003
Short Title
R V DESJOURDY
Accessed
11/19/23, 8:07 PM
Library Catalog
Rights
Copyright (c) 2021 The Canadian Bar Foundation
Extra
Number: 3
Citation
Jones, D., & Sheehy, E. (2021). “R. v. Desjourdy: A Narrative of White Innocence and Racialized Danger.” The Canadian Bar Review, 99(3). https://cbr.cba.org/index.php/cbr/article/view/4714
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