After years of watching Canada and its academy start to make amends for the historical mistreatment of its Indigenous population, a leader of black empowerment sees the same reckoning finally coming along colour lines.
Afua Cooper, a professor of sociology and social anthropology at Dalhousie University, said that she looked with admiration at Canada鈥檚 willingness to hear its native populations and address its long-standing abuse of them.
But for too long, black Canadians have had less luck, said Jamaican-born Professor Cooper, a poet whose 40 years of work in Canada have made her a leading voice of black rights in higher education.
鈥淢y opinion is that white people can only pay attention to one thing,鈥 Professor Cooper told 探花视频. For the decade-plus that Canada鈥檚 Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) commanded national attention, she said, the message to black Canadians has been: 鈥淟et鈥檚 come back to you 30 years from now.鈥
探花视频
THE Campus resource: Expert Q&A on equity-first instruction
Through stops that include the University of Toronto, Simon Fraser University, York University and now Dalhousie, Professor Cooper has been a trailblazer in creating and teaching courses on race and gender studies.
She also has helped campuses confront anti-black racism and their institutional histories with it, written books animating centuries of Canada鈥檚 black experience and, , won a C$1 million (拢586,000) federal grant to write a school curriculum for such topics.
探花视频
She can also recall her early days, while pursuing her doctoral degree at Toronto, when a racist student was so abusive in class that she needed police protection for the rest of the semester.
Now, both inside university campuses and beyond them, Professor Cooper said, a societal shift appeared imminent, prodded by a steadily increasing black population that is making clear its demands for change.
Individual examples of the problem, she said, include Toronto鈥檚 medical school suffering the embarrassment when its valedictorian, Chika Oriuwa, was revealed to have been the only black student in an entering class of 259 students.
Last month, a York University in which black Canadians 鈥 despite 400 years in their country 鈥 suffer poorer educational opportunities, higher unemployment, lower pay and greater incarceration rates.
鈥淚t鈥檚 grim, it鈥檚 grim,鈥 Professor Cooper said of such data.
For Canada鈥檚 Indigenous population, the centrepiece focus for racial repair has been the TRC. That began as a national examination of the horrors of the Indian residential school system and led to sweeping policy changes affecting Indigenous peoples throughout society.
探花视频
In higher education, it鈥檚 meant an almost universal commitment across Canadian institutions to recruit and retain Indigenous students, hire Indigenous faculty, create spaces designed for Indigenous gatherings and practices, and overhaul curricula to teach Indigenous history and reflect Indigenous ideas.
Such improvements are slowly starting to materialise for black Canadians, Professor Cooper said, as part of a broad uprising by a black population that now accounts for nearly 4 per cent of the country and is expected to exceed 5 per cent by 2036.
探花视频
For her federal grant, Professor Cooper is leading a project called A Black People鈥檚 History of Canada that will create聽聽about the history of black Canadians.
Individual universities also have begun聽, both looking at their past and realigning their future, Professor Cooper said.聽She led her own institution鈥檚 exploration of its聽, guiding an internal panel towards a conclusion in 2019 that 鈥淒alhousie鈥 could stay because its meaning has been overtaken by far more positive recent associations, but that other reforms were necessary.
Steps now being taken by Dalhousie include establishing a black studies institute, creating a Canada-focused black studies degree programme and improving the recruitment of black students in the sciences.
Advocates of change within universities, she said, were strengthened by actions elsewhere in the country, such as the lawsuit late last year by hundreds of current and former black federal employees detailing pro-white workplace discrimination, and the protests in her home province of Nova Scotia that have driven reforms in the Halifax police force.
鈥淏lack people are forcing themselves on to the agenda,鈥 Professor Cooper said.
Yet black Canadians still lack some of the structural networks of the Indigenous population, who have assemblies and chiefs across the country, she said. While about half Canada鈥檚 Indigenous people report experiences of chronic racism, 70 per cent of black Canadians feel that way, according to the report by York鈥檚 Institute for Social Research.
探花视频
Canadian universities are, at least, starting to do the right thing, Professor Cooper said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 never too late," she said, before adding: 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of too late, but I have to be optimistic.鈥
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?









