Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Racism common for 70% of Black Canadians: survey

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 May, 2021 09:59 AM
  • Racism common for 70% of Black Canadians: survey

Seven in 10 Black Canadians have experienced racism on a regular or occasional basis, suggests a preliminary study that experts are calling a "first step" toward dismantling systemic discrimination.

Researchers at York University released early findings Friday from a national survey examining how Black Canadians experience race and racism across social spheres.

The interim report, produced in partnership with the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, draws from the responses of roughly 5,500 participants, including about 1,800 Black people, between March 21 and May 5.

The ongoing study finds that 70 per cent of Black respondents reported facing racism regularly or from time to time, compared to roughly half of Indigenous people and other racialized people.

More than one in five Black respondentstold researchers that they have been unfairly stopped by the police in the last year.

Lead author Lorne Foster says the research breaks new ground in compiling granular data on Black Canadians, in contrast to existing literature thatcombinesall racialized groups into the catch-all category of "visible minorities."

"We see this data as really the first step in dismantling systemic racism, particularly anti-Black systemic racism," says Foster, the director of York University's Institute for Social Research

"With this type of information, it's difficult now to even deny or ignore the calls from the Black community to address racism in the major sectors and institutions of our society."

Foster says researchers are using traditional online survey techniques and new digital tool to gather a wide breadth of insights, including participant-submitted policy proposals.

The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

Foster says he and his team will continue to refine and expand their investigation as data collection continues through June 1.

But the initial results paint a clear and detailed picture of the extent to which anti-Black racism pervades Canada's systems of education, health care and criminal justice, he says.

Of particular concern is racism in the professional world, which Foster pointed to as a primary driver for socioeconomic disparities along racial lines.

A staggering 96 per cent of Black respondents said that racism is a problem in the workplace, including 78 per cent who saw it as a serious issue.

Moreover, 47 per cent of Black Canadians told researchers they have been treated unfairly by an employer in hiring, pay or promotion in the last year.

MORE National ARTICLES

Pandemic budget extends COVID-19 aid until fall

Pandemic budget extends COVID-19 aid until fall
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s first crack at a budget plan is also widely viewed as a pre-election platform with more than $100 million in new spending over the next three years targeting a wide variety of voters, from seniors and their caregivers, to parents and business owners.

Pandemic budget extends COVID-19 aid until fall

Vancouver man on scooter collides with coyote

Vancouver man on scooter collides with coyote
Sgt. Steve Addison says the man was riding on the Stanley Park seawall around midnight Sunday when he hit the coyote. The man punched one of the animals, then waved over a passerby who called 911.

Vancouver man on scooter collides with coyote

More provinces to expand AstraZeneca access

More provinces to expand AstraZeneca access
Ontario reported Monday morning it had administered another 67,000 vaccine doses, pushing Canada as a whole over the 10-million mark for doses administered.

More provinces to expand AstraZeneca access

Vancouver Police see large crowds during unseasonably warm weekend calling it a serious crime

Vancouver Police see large crowds during unseasonably warm weekend calling it a serious crime
“The downtown core and West End proved particularly challenging, as the summer weather drew thousands of Vancouver residents to public parks and beaches, while attracted large crowds from other parts of Metro Vancouver.”    

Vancouver Police see large crowds during unseasonably warm weekend calling it a serious crime

Balveer Singh Boparai charged in connection with arsons in Surrey last week

Balveer Singh Boparai charged in connection with arsons in Surrey last week
According to the RCMP, officers responded to the restaurant and quickly gathered enough evidence to identify a suspect and then officers dispersed throughout the area and patrolled for the suspect, who was located and arrested at a nearby bus stop. 

Balveer Singh Boparai charged in connection with arsons in Surrey last week

Vancouver Police identify Coal Harbor shooting victim as Abbotsford resident Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal

Vancouver Police identify Coal Harbor shooting victim as Abbotsford resident Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal
“We continue to believe this incident was a targeted killing and that Dhaliwal was the intended victim,” says Sergeant Steve Addison, VPD. “While we don’t think there is an immediate risk to the public, it is always shocking and unnerving when gun violence takes place in such a busy, public place.

Vancouver Police identify Coal Harbor shooting victim as Abbotsford resident Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal