ID: |
HARP-372 |
Title: |
Access to justice for deaf Inuit in Nunavut: the role of “Inuit sign language“ |
Source: |
Canadian Psychology , v.42(1) F’01 pg 61-73 |
Parties: |
|
Dispute Resolution Organ: |
|
Year: |
2001 |
Pages: |
0 |
Author(s): |
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Keywords: |
Canada, equality before the law, language, justice, ethnic minorities, civil and political rights, indigenous people, Inuit, Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, First Nations, minority rights |
Abstract: |
This paper presents a personal perspective on the issue of access to justice (in the context of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms)|for the deaf Inuit population of Canada’s newest Territory – Nunavut. My experience in assessing a deaf Inuk in Baker Lake R v. Suwarak (1999) who apparently had no known language, followed an earlier Nova Scotia case R|v. Roy (1994) which involved a deaf man who could not hear, speak or use sign language. In both Roy and Suwarak and I concluded that a trial could not proceed, but in the case of Suwarak, the possibility was raised that an indigenous form of sign language, which I tentatively termed “Inuit Sign Language” was being used. The results of a preliminary study of the status of signed languages in Nunavut based on field visits and interactions with deaf people and their families in three communities, Iqaluit, Pangnirtung, and Rankin Inlet is described. The possibility that “Inuit Sign Language” exists is discussed within the framework of various theories of language development and also within the context of earlier literature which indicates that many Aboriginal communities had|(and possibly still have) flourishing signed languages. Finally, the need for increased research by psychologists on the complex linguistic environment of deaf persons in Nunavut is emphasized. |
Secured: |
False |
Download Article: |
Available here |
Keywords: Canada, Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, civil and political rights, equality before the law, ethnic minorities, First Nations, indigenous people, Inuit, justice, language, minority rights