Description
Kent Roach, CM, FRSC is a professor of law at the University of Toronto. He is the author of eighteen books including Canadian Policing: Why and How it Must Change, shortlisted for both the Balsillie and Donner Prizes for best book in public policy. He has conducted research for public inquiries on policing including the Arar, Air India, Ipperwash, Public Order Emergency, and Toronto Missing Persons inquiries and served as chair of the RCMP’s Management Advisory Board. He received the Molson Prize in 2017 for contributions to the social sciences and humanities.
Red Alert is a timely exploration of a national institution that has lurched from crisis to crisis. Once a mainstay of the nation’s image, the future of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) has become increasingly uncertain with Alberta and British Columbia proposing the establishment of provincial services to replace them and Justin Trudeau calling for the force to be reduced by two thirds to focus on national security.
Policing and legal expert Kent Roach highlights the increasing challenges the RCMP faces as underlined by the 2020 massacres of twenty-two people in rural Nova Scotia and the underexamined 2022 mass murder of eleven people on James Smith Cree Nation. Red Alert explains how the RCMP’s insistence on boot camp training helps it retain its colonial and paramilitary nature, making it an incompatible fit for the specialized and dynamic world of modern policing. Roach emphasizes the need for restorative approaches to community safety including Indigenous peacekeeping and having police work with communities in both national security and local policing. Includes the chapters: 'Too Many Massacres: The Contract Policing of Rural and Remote Canada' and 'Too Many Deaths: Policing and Community Safety in Indigenous Communities', and 'As Goes Depot So Goes the RCMP'.
A compelling portrayal of the pressures facing the RCMP, and the prospects for meaningful reform within and without it, Red Alert is essential for understanding the troubling state of law enforcement.
Reviews:
"As a First Nations person and a former Court of Appeal judge, I have lived at the intersection of Canadian law and its often-painful history. I thought I knew the story of the RCMP - but Red Alert is a revelation that left me distressed and, at the same time, somewhat optimistic. For anyone who cares about justice, truth, and the soul of this country, Roach's words are a haunting, necessary must-read." Hon. Harry S. LaForme, OC, IPC, Indigenous Lawyer
"The past decade has seen countless reports calling for reform of the RCMP yet very little has changed. This book shines a spotlight on this colossal failure to act. In addition to laying bare the many problems within the RCMP, Kent Roach outlines practical and achievable pathways to change. Red Alert is a wake-up call that has the potential to spark broader demands for change and force real action at last." Naiomi Metallic, Associate Professor and Chancellor's Chair in Aboriginal Law and Policy, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University
"In Red Alert, Kent Roach provides a rigorous and timely analysis of the existential crises facing the RCMP. The book's evidence-based blueprint for institutional reform makes it a significant contribution to public policy and an essential text for scholars and practitioners concerned with the future of Canadian justice. Red Alert is an indispensable wake-up call about the need for systemic reform of Canadian policing." Richard Jochelson, Dean of Law, Faculty of Law, University of Manitoba
