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Truscott Lecture in Justice 2025

Submitted by scoope04 on February 24, 2025 - 10:44am
Date: 
Tuesday, March 18, 2025 - 7:00pm to 8:30pm
Location: 

Richards Building 2520

Truscott Lecture in Justice. Reimagining Canada’s Prison: Balancing Security,  Rights, and Reform
Body: 

Join Howard Sapers for a compelling talk on how the Canadian correctional and justice system must be measured not only by how it punishes but by how it upholds human rights, dignity, and fairness—even behind bars. 

Headshot of Howard Sapers

"Being 'tough on crime' must not come at the cost of justice, dignity, and human rights. True reform means creating a corrections system that is fair, humane, and effective. We must confront the systemic flaws, address the misuse of segregation, and ensure that rehabilitation, not just punishment, is at the heart of our approach to justice."

Howard Sapers

Join us for a compelling talk exploring the Canadian correctional system, beginning with Howard Saper's personal reflection on the wrongful conviction of Steven Truscott. This discussion will examine the realities of incarceration, the impact of being "tough on crime," and pressing issues such as the overrepresentation of Indigenous people in prisons. Using recent cases—including Paul Bernardo’s prison transfer and the government's response to Charter violations in segregation practices—the talk will highlight systemic challenges and potential reforms for a more humane and effective correctional system.


The lecture series is part of the Truscott Initiative launched at U of G in 2009 to commemorate the struggles of Guelph resident Steven Truscott and his family.

Truscott is known across Canada for his decades-long battle to prove his innocence after the 1959 murder of his schoolmate Lynne Harper. He was wrongly convicted of the crime at age 14 and spent years in prison before his release in 1969. He was acquitted by the Ontario Court of Appeal in 2007.

The Truscott Initiative aims to improve understanding of the nation’s complex criminal justice system and to highlight how criminal justice intersects with other policy areas and broader conceptions of justice.


Registration is not required for this event.

About

Welcome to the College of Social and Applied Human Sciences (CSAHS), which traces its origins and traditions to the establishment of the Macdonald Institute, one of the University of Guelph's three founding colleges.

The college provides programming in a range of social science and applied human science disciplines and support to discipline-based and inter/multi-disciplinary researchers.

Academic Units

Criminal Justice and Public Policy
Family Relations & Applied Nutrition
Geography, Environment & Geomatics
Guelph Institute of Development Studies
Political Science
Psychology
Sociology & Anthropology

Centres & Institutes

Arrell Food Institute
Canada India Research Centre for Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE)
Community Engaged Scholarship Institute (CESI)
Maplewoods Centre for Family Therapy and Child Psychology
The Live Work Well Research Centre
ReVision: The Centre for Art and Social Justice

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College of Social & Applied Human Sciences
University of Guelph
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Guelph, Ontario,
N1G 2W1
Canada

Email: csahs@uoguelph.ca
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Source URL:https://csahs.uoguelph.ca/events/2025/03/truscott-lecture-justice-2025