User talk:Mre88135/Criminal sentencing in Canada

The articles topic speaks on "Criminal Sentencing in Canada" but narrowly focusses in on a R v Gladue case as a declaration standard for criminal sentencing in Canada. Many claims are made without definitive evidence to support them by having the correct citations which is crucial in validating credibility in the articles claims. The article is underdeveloped and needs to add more supporting evidence that guides readers to through passage points and subsections the give direct evidence to the articles topic. In addition, the article could be enhanced through visual images. The article is short and does not provide enough evidence that support this type of topic. This article needs more development; equity gaps are present in the description and focus on racial and socioeconomic solely. Revisions may include but not limited to: historical context, rights, legacy of radicalized communities, stereotypes, gender inequality, patriarchal systems and biases within the criminal justice system.Katiesherwood (talk) 21:27, 19 September 2020 (UTC)

Suggested citations: Telling it to the Judge: "Taking Native History to Court" by Arthur J. Ray (book) Aboriginal Incarceration in Canada Since 1978: "Every Picture Tells the Same Story" by Julian V. Roberts & Andrew A. Reid (2017) Why Gladue Needs an Intersectional Lens: "The Silencing of Sex in Indigenous Women's Sentencing Decisions. (Canada) by Charlotte Baigent (2020) Aboriginal Women and the Canadian Criminal Justice System: "Examining The Aboriginal Justice Strategy Through the Lens of Structural Social Work" by Sylvia Reitmanova and Robyn Henderson (2019)