Balados

Episode 22 (En anglais): The Intersection of Policing, The Criminal Justice System and Cultural Diversity: How to Ensure a Representative Jury

– Mai 2021

This podcast is available on your favourite platforms, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Subscribe, rate, and leave a comment! Please write us to info@ciaj-icaj.ca if you wish to receive an email when a new podcast is published.

Episode 22 (En anglais): The Intersection of Policing, The Criminal Justice System and Cultural Diversity: How to Ensure a Representative Jury
Broadcast Date: May 27, 2021

Summary

With reference to existing Supreme Court of Canada and appellate jurisprudence (see, eg. R. v. Kokopenace 2015 SCC 28), this session will consider the existing methods and best practices for ensuring a representative jury. It will also look at managing a trial where issues of culture and religion are at the forefront. The panel will address the question of how to properly take account of diversity in managing a jury trial and charging the jury. Is there more that could be done to ensure the impartiality of the jury?

Note: This podcast is an excerpt from CIAJ’s 2017 annual conference, which focused on Cultural and Religious Diversity in the Administration of Justice. The next annual conference, on Indigenous Peoples and the Law, will take place in Vancouver from November 17 to 19, 2021.

Guest

  • The Honourable Justice Michael H. Tulloch, Court of Appeal for Ontario

Justice Michael H. Tulloch is a judge of the Court of Appeal for Ontario. He was appointed in June 2012. Previously, he was a judge of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice from 2003 to 2012. Justice Tulloch is a graduate of York University and Osgoode Hall Law School. After being called to the Bar, he was appointed an Assistant Crown Attorney for the Central Western Region of Ontario, as well as Toronto. He later worked in private practice and also as a special prosecuting agent for the Department of Justice, Canada. Throughout his judicial career, Justice Tulloch has presided over a wide range of cases in the areas of Criminal, Civil, Constitutional, and Commercial Law, and has participated in a number of reviews and commissions. 

Presenter

  • Pierre Poupart, Ad. E., Criminal Defence Lawyer, Co-Founder, Poupart, Dadour, Touma et Associés

Documentation

Reports from CIAJ’s Provincial Roundtables on Jury Representation

In the spring and fall of 2019, the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice (CIAJ) held provincial roundtables on the topic of systemic barriers to the representation of Indigenous peoples and racialized minorities on juries in Canada. The roundtables took place in British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, and Atlantic Canada respectively. Ontario and Quebec Roundtables were postponed due to the pandemic and shall resume in 2021.


In All Fairness is a Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice podcast channel welcoming representatives from the legal community and exploring how we can all contribute to improving the administration of justice in Canada. Legal professionals will benefit from informed discussions on key issues, essential knowledge and insights to strengthen their practice.

Visit the upcoming programs section of our website or the online library, or contact us if you want to learn more and expand your skills. Numerous programs are available, including customized training.

Questions and suggestions are always welcome. Please write to info@ciaj-icaj.ca