Robin F. Hansen teaches law at the University of Saskatchewan. Her work has been published in journals, including the Modern Law Review, Global Jurist, and the Journal of Legal Education. She lives in Saskatoon.
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List of Tables Introduction PART I. OBSERVATIONS 1. Sentencing the Newborn 2. Automatic Separation in Canada PART II. THEORY 3. A Systems View of the Legal System 4. The Colonial Lens: Seeing the "Savage" and the "Dying" 5. Case Study: The Stanley Acquittal PART III. ANALYSIS: SPATIAL DEFINITIONS IN COLONIAL IDEOLOGY 6. The Instrumentalized Stereotype of the Unfit Indigenous Mother 7. Courts as the Gateway to Indigenous Over-Incarceration 8. Prison Wastelands and the Removal of Children PART IV. ANALYSIS: OTHER ASPECTS OF THE SYSTEM 9. Law through the Androcentric Lens 10. Factors that Buffer the Legal System from Change PART V. SOLUTIONS 11. The Illegality of Shackling a Pregnant Person in Labour 12. How the Law Protects a Newborn from Automatic Separation from Their Mother 195 Conclusion Acknowledgements Appendix A. Canadian Federal/Provincial/Territorial Ministers of Justice (2023) Bibliography Notes Index

