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Spare the Child - by Ailsa Watkinson
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Highlights
- An urgent examination of Canada's legal, cultural, and historical acceptance of corporal punishment and the children it continues to fail In Spare the Child: Ending Childhood Corporal Punishment, author Ailsa Watkinson exposes a troubling truth: since 1982, Section 43 of the Canadian Criminal code has granted legal defense for parents and caregivers who use corporal punishment on children for the purpose of "correction.
- About the Author: Ailsa M. Watkinson is Professor Emerita of Social Work, University of Regina, and a human rights advocate.
- 229 Pages
- Political Science, Public Policy
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Book Synopsis
An urgent examination of Canada's legal, cultural, and historical acceptance of corporal punishment and the children it continues to fail
In Spare the Child: Ending Childhood Corporal Punishment, author Ailsa Watkinson exposes a troubling truth: since 1982, Section 43 of the Canadian Criminal code has granted legal defense for parents and caregivers who use corporal punishment on children for the purpose of "correction." Remarkably, children remain the only group in Canada explicitly left unprotected from physical punishment under the law.
In 2004, a legal challenge heard by the Supreme Court of Canada argued that Section 43 directly violated children's equality and security rights under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The challenge argued further that Section 43 undermined the three P's of children's rights--provision, protection, and participation--as outlined in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Despite all this, the Supreme Court upheld the right to use corporal punishment in the home, reinforcing a legal framework that prioritizes parental rights over those of children. Watkinson critically examines that decision, its legal implications, and the psychological and social consequences of permitting physical force against children.
Beyond the courtroom, Spare the Child deconstructs a practice long accepted as a common sense means of disciplining children. It traces the deep historical roots of corporal punishment, including the legacy of European colonization, religion, and ideology in its justification--particularly through its devastating role in residential schools and lasting impact on Indigenous communities.
Grounded in evidence-based research, the book reveals the long-term psychological harms of corporal punishment, urging parents and policymakers to defend children's fundamental right to dignity, safety, and protection.
Review Quotes
""Spare the Child is a serious and timely recounting of the advocacy work to challenge section 43 of the Criminal Code.""--Cheryl Milne, Executive Director of the David Asper Centre for Constitutional Rights
About the Author
Ailsa M. Watkinson is Professor Emerita of Social Work, University of Regina, and a human rights advocate. She is the mother of three sons and grandmother to two grandchildren. She lives in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.