In this episode of BlackTalk, Dr. Andy Knight and Samira Schultz are joined by Dr. Monetta Bailey for a conversation about race, ethnicity, immigrant status, crime, Critical Race Theory, public discourse, and institutional systems. The episode focuses on how Black, racialized, and immigrant youth are governed, represented, and positioned within institutions such as criminal justice, education, immigration, public policy, and Canadian society more broadly. Dr. Bailey’s work helps frame racism not only as individual prejudice, but as something built into language, social knowledge, institutional assumptions, policies, and everyday practices. The conversation also explores her forthcoming book, The Violence of Words: The Conditions, Construction and Consequences of Racist Public Discourse, and asks how racist public discourse can shape harm, fear, belonging, punishment, and the ways young people come to understand themselves.
Dr. Monetta Bailey is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Ambrose University. Her research examines race, ethnicity, immigrant status, crime, Critical Race Theory, racist public discourse, youth criminalization, and institutional systems. Her scholarship focuses especially on how racialized and immigrant youth are represented, governed, and treated within systems such as criminal justice, education, immigration, and public policy. Dr. Bailey’s work also examines how racist language and public narratives produce real social and institutional consequences, including shaping who is seen as innocent, threatening, deserving, criminal, or belonging. Her forthcoming book, The Violence of Words: The Conditions, Construction and Consequences of Racist Public Discourse, further develops this work by examining how racist public discourse causes harm and how Canada understands racism, hate speech, and institutional accountability.