2022 Larkin Lecture: November 16, 2022 from 6:00-8:00 pm. Tickets now available!

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From: IOF Communications <IOFcommunications@oceans.ubc.ca>
Sent: October 21, 2022 1:45 PM
Subject: 2022 Larkin Lecture: November 16, 2022 from 6:00-8:00 pm. Tickets now available!
Importance: High

 

Hello all:

 

Please spread the word about our 2022 Larkin Lecture. This year’s speaker is Dr. Zoe Todd, Associate Professor at Carleton University, and her topic is “Critical Freshwater Fish Futures: using interdisciplinary and arts-based research approaches to engage relationships between Indigenous sovereignty and freshwater fish well-being.”

 

The event is on November 16th, but has often ‘sold out’ so RSVP early!

 

Regards,

 

Katherine Came (She, Her, Hers)

Communications Manager

Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries

Faculty of Science, The University of British Columbia

Aquatic Ecosystems Research Laboratory

Rm. 233, 2202 Main Mall

Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4

Located on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xwməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam) People

604-827-4325

k.came@oceans.ubc.ca

@UBCOceans   |   facebook.com/UBCOceans   |    oceans.ubc.ca

 

 

 

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From: IOF Communications <iofcommunications@oceans.ubc.ca>

 

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2022 LARKIN LECTURE

 

Critical Freshwater Fish Futures: using interdisciplinary and arts-based research approaches to engage relationships between Indigenous sovereignty and freshwater fish well-being

 

 

Wednesday, November 16, 2022
6:00 pm  – 8:00 pm
AERL Theatre, UBC or
Over ZOOM (hybrid)

 

 

This talk provides an overview of the relationships between Indigenous sovereignty and freshwater fish futures in Canada, with an explicit focus on ongoing community-driven interdisciplinary research partnerships in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Ontario. Drawing on decades of scholarship in the discipline of Critical Indigenous Studies that centres Indigenous sovereignty to elucidate relationships between Indigenous peoples and colonial nation-states and entities in Canada, this talk examines how an unambiguous engagement with Indigenous sovereignty, as understood through Indigenous legal orders and legal-ethical practices in Canada and internationally, can strengthen efforts to protect at-risk aquatic species and watersheds across the country. The use of arts-based research-creation approaches will be examined to help illustrate dynamic cross-disciplinary and pluralistic approaches to documenting, engaging, and upholding plural governance principles grounded in Indigenous sovereignties across many different homelands.

 

Speaker: 

Dr. Zoe Todd

Associate Professor
Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Carleton University

Dr. Zoe Todd (she/they) (Red River Métis) is a practice-led artist-researcher who studies the relationships between Indigenous sovereignty and freshwater fish futures in Canada. As a Métis anthropologist and researcher-artist, Dr. Todd combines dynamic social science and humanities research and research-creation approaches – including ethnography, archival research, oral testimony, and experimental artistic research practices – within a framework of Indigenous philosophy to elucidate new ways to study and support the complex relationships between Indigenous sovereignty and freshwater fish well-being in Canada today. They are a co-founder of the Institute for Freshwater Fish Futures (2018), which is a collaborative Indigenous-led initiative that is ‘restor(y)ing fish futures, together’ across three continents. They are also a co-founder of the Indigenous Environmental Knowledge Institute (IEKI) at Carleton University (2021). They were a 2018 Yale Presidential Visiting Fellow, and in 2020 they were elected to the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars.

 

Please note: This session will be recorded
Please RSVP: 
https://oceans.ubc.ca/2022larkinlecture

 

 

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