Tag Archives: Canada

Post 4 – Regions differ in Indigenous acknowledgement at Canadian universities – David Loti

https://news.ubc.ca/2017/03/01/regions-differ-in-indigenous-acknowledgement-at-canadian-universities/

Visited 20 November 2018

 

This article summarizes Linc Kesler, Rima Wilkes, Aaron Duong, and Howard Ramos’s academic study, a first of its kind, “Canadian University Acknowledgement of Indigenous Lands, Treaties and Peoples”, published in Canadian Review of Sociology in February 2017. The study investigates land acknowledgements at Canadian universities. The article quotes UBC Professor Linc Kesler, “Acknowledgements indicate respect for Indigenous communities and bring attention to an often ignored history.” He continues, “It sets a context for present relationships among Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples that can be thought of in a more deliberate way.” The summary also indicates that, “The researchers also question whether or not acknowledgement helps promote reconciliation or merely acts as a ‘tokenistic practice of checking the box.’”

(Entry 3) Website: Native Land

Website:  Native Land

This second interactive map provides the user with the opportunity to enter a location within the search box and extract relevant information on treaties, territories, and/or languages found within that particular location within Canada.
The map also comes with a Teacher’s Guide explaining how maps can “potentially function as colonial artifacts and represent a very particular way of seeing the world – a way primarily concerned with ownership, exclusivity, and power relations” (‘NativeLand.ca – Teacher’s Guide’, n.d.)

LINK:
Native Land

NativeLand.ca. (n.d.). Retrieved 6 November 2018, from https://native-land.ca/