UPDATE
ON CANADA RESEARCH CHAIRS: HUMAN RIGHTS COMPLAINT
The eight
university professors who initiated a human rights complaint against
Industry Canada over
discrimination in the Canada Research Chairs Program regretfully report
that
mediation by the Canadian Human Rights Commission to resolve the
complaint has
failed.
The complaints,
filed by eight faculty members from universities across Canada, point
to the
very small allocation of the 2,000 chairs to people from groups
protected by
human rights legislation. For example, the latest figures on the Canada
Research Chairs web site show that 1,035 Chairs have been awarded to
date; of
these only 175 (17%) have been awarded to women. Complete data are not
available for any other equity-seeking group.
Industry Canada is
responsible for the design and implementation of the $900 million
program. The complainants hope that the
complaint
process will result in the kinds of changes that will make the hiring
of the
Chairs transparent and fair in all cases, and will avoid secretive,
single-candidate
searches.
The complainants
also challenge the small allocation to the humanities and social
sciences,
disciplines which involve the majority of Canadian students and
professors.
Although mediation
has failed, the eight complainants will continue to pursue the issues
with the
Human Rights Commission. They feel
strongly that federal government programs should be in conformity with
Canadian
law and the international agreements that Canada has
signed to protect individuals from discrimination.
The eight
faculty
members who filed complaints are:
Marjorie Griffin Cohen
(Simon Fraser University)
Louise Forsyth (Emerita University of Saskatchewan)
Glenis Joyce (University of Saskatchewan)
Audrey Kobayashi
(Queen's University)
Shree Mulay (McGill University)
Michele Ollivier (University of Ottawa)
Susan Prentice (University of Manitoba)
Wendy Robbins (University of New Brunswick)
The human rights
complaint has been endorsed unanimously by the CAUT
Council, which represents unionized faculty
all across Canada.
Distributed
by PAR-L, November 9, 2003. More
information is available on the PARL Web
site at:
http://www.unb.ca/PAR-L/CRCcomplaint.htm.
Newsletter, January 2004 -Text