Ezzat Fattah
"Crime is normal, even natural behaviour," Ezzat Fattah contends.
Decriminalization of drugs, modernization of the criminal law, abolition of the death penalty and of prisons, the struggle for human rights and for social justice have been some of the controversial lifelong focal issues for the critical research and social activism of Ezzat Fattah.
Among several crusading international missions he undertook for Amnesty International, the one to Libya stands out because of his pivotal address to the Peoples Assembly and the session he had with Colonel Khaddafi pleading for the commutation of sentences of those on death row.
Founder of the SFU School of Criminology and one of the early pioneers in the young discipline of victimology, Dr. Ezzat Fattahs research led him to become an outspoken critic of the victim movement, whose demands he sees as punitive and vindictive. He advocates instead a humane system of restorative justice, based on the notions of healing, reparation and restitution.
- SFU Media and Public Relations: Fattah wins Sterling prize
- SFU Media and Public Relations: An uneasy silence
Winners of the Prize
- 2011 Bruce Lanphear, Faculty of Health Sciences
- 2010 Mark Jaccard, School of Resource and Environmental Management
- 2009 Michael Worobey, Biology
- 2008 Heribert Adam, Sociology
- 2007 Bruce Alexander, Psychology
- 2006 Roy Miki, English
- 2005 Kim Rossmo, Criminology
- 2004 Herb Grubel, Economics
- 2003 Zamir Punja, Biology
- 2002 Charles Crawford, Psychology
- 2001 Gary Mauser, Business Administration
- 2000 Doreen Kimura, Psychology
- 1999 Ezzat Fattah, Criminology
- 1998 Mark Winston, Biology
- 1997 John Lowman, Criminology
- 1995 Russel Ogden, MA student, Criminology
- 1994 Parzival Copes, Economics