“…Finally, Jamaican crime, in these 1992 articles, is taken to be confined to violent crime, so that the picture that emerges from the 1992 articles is indeed similar to the one we find in 1994. It is also clear that the 1992 discussion was part of a much wider and more longstanding tendency to criminalize racialized "minorities" in general, and Jamaican Canadians in particular, in the media: a criminalization that results in discriminatory treatment at the personal level (as documented in Wortley, Hagan, & Macmillan 1997; see also Makin, 1994), and that is reflected in research conducted over many years and across several disciplines (Mirchandanai & Chan, 2002) But what was apparently new to Toronto in 1994, and which proved to be the key factor co-ordinating the re-institution of the identity of the Jamaican criminal, was the introduction of a specific program for re-orienting our discursive and non-discursive conduct in relation to its problematic individuality. This program was widely embraced for a time, although it only ever partially took hold outside of the police department, and from the beginning drew criticism from some commentators (DiManno, 1994b) and citizens (Makin, 1994).…”