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First Black Canadian Judge Joins New Council

First Black Canadian Judge Joins New Council

Published 2 weeks, 4 days ago
Description

Corrine Sparks, Canada’s first Black female judge and a revered figure in Nova Scotia’s judiciary, is now stepping into a pivotal federal role as the new Advisory Council on Rights, Equality and Inclusion tackles racism and hate across the country. After retiring from the Family Court after 30 years, Sparks joins the council following backlash over its initial lack of Black representation — a glaring omission that critics feared signaled anti-Black racism was being sidelined. Though the council’s mandate doesn’t explicitly name anti-Black racism, it will draw from existing strategies that already address it, including data showing Black people are disproportionately targeted by hate crimes. The government also added Archbishop Donald Bolen to the council, aiming to build a more inclusive body — but the question remains: is this move enough to truly center Black voices in the fight against systemic racism?

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