Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Fri, 20 Jul 2001 12:34:59 -0600 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
But then why do we see increases of all types of crime in Saskatchewan?
While I might do my own analysis of reaction to oppression (as much of the
crime exists in the aboriginal community), our government's policies have
not been punitive a la Harris - or have they for a particular group?
> ----------
> From: Dennis Raphael[SMTP:[log in to unmask]]
> Reply To: Health Promotion on the Internet
> Sent: Friday, July 20, 2001 11:45 AM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: When social policy is health policy
>
> <<File: ATT02403.txt>>
> Just like in Richard Wilkinson's "Unhealthy societies: The afflictions of
> inequality."
>
> Now if reporters could begin to analyze why this might be the case!
>
> Violent crime up 7.5% in Greater Toronto
> Young people have highest rate, Statscan says
> Elaine Carey
> DEMOGRAPHICS REPORTER
> Greater Toronto's violent crime rate has risen dramatically for the
> first time
> in seven years and a leading criminologist
> blames the Harris government.
>
> ``It seems to me inevitable that we would have an increase in violence
> because
> it seems we have policies designed that
> way,'' said Anthony Doob, a criminology professor at the University of
> Toronto.
>
> Violent crime in Toronto rose by 7.5 per cent last year to a rate of 868
> incidents per 100,000 population, Statistics
> Canada said in its annual report on crime yesterday. But property
> crimes,
> including theft, break and enter and fraud, fell
> by 6.8 per cent.
>
> This lead to a 2.1 per cent decline in the over-all crime rate, leaving
> Toronto with the fourth lowest rate of all
> metropolitan areas, after Chicoutimi-Jonqui
>
|
|
|