This article examines the ways in which the Sino-Canadian relationship has shaped Canadian legal structures and vice versa. The Canadian state’s anxieties about Chinese foreign policy have led to the “securitization” of various domains of domestic law, whereby the state has emphasized the national security implications of legal concepts, decisions, and regimes. This securitization may fuel discrimination towards Chinese Canadians, and the article suggests reforms that the Canadian state can adopt as it seeks to simultaneously implement a robust China strategy and avoid the mistreatment of Chinese Canadians.