Northern Quebec circuit court should be adapted to local conditions: report
MONTREAL — The justice system in Quebec’s northern Nunavik region should be better adapted to local culture and have a more permanent presence in the area, according to a new report.
Jean-Claude Latraverse, who practiced law in the region for 20 years, wrote in his report that technology also needs to be used to improve access to justice in the region’s 14 communities, none of which are accessible by road.
“It is of primary importance to recognize that the system, as it currently exists, has failed in many respects,” he wrote in the report released Friday. “Reoffending rates have not declined, the Inuit have not been included and bridges with traditional dispute resolution methods have not been used.”
Latraverse, who worked as both a public defender and a prosecutor, was commissioned by the provincial government and the Makivik Corporation, the legal representative of Inuit in Quebec, to study the region’s itinerant court.