Archive for the ‘Blog’ Category

Indigenous Education : Lessons in Self-Determination

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

McGill University’s Aboriginal Sustainability Project and the Sauvé Scholar Program is proud to announce that it will be hosting

‘Indigenous Education : Lessons in Self-Determination from the Akwesasne Freedom School’

Join us for an interesting discussion with Dr. Louellyn White on the Akwesasne freedom schools’ self determination practices in indigenous education.

Dr. Louellyn White is Mohawk from Akwesasne and grew up in the Mohawk Valley of central New York. She is currently an Assistant Professor in First Peoples Studies at Concordia University. She completed a PhD in American Indian Studies from the University of Arizona where she focused on Indigenous education and language revitalization. Dr. White was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Illinois. Her book manuscript “Free to be Kanienkeha’ka: A case study of educational self-determination at the Akwesasne Freedom School,” will be published with the University of Oklahoma Press.

Visit our Facebook event page : https://www.facebook.com/events/339374076095780/

Thursday, March 1

5:30pm – 7:30pm

Maison Jeanne Sauvé
1514, Docteur-Penfield Avenue

FREE ADMISSION

Inter-Tribal Youth Centre Seeks Volunteers

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Are you interested in working with youth and teaching?

The Aboriginal Sustainability Project is looking for volunteers to tutor youth at the Inter-Tribal Youth Centre’s new program, Homework Help!

Volunteers will provide free one-on-one tutoring and mentoring to youth, ages 12 and up, in subject areas that fit your personal expertise. Strengthen your teaching skills and learn more about Montreal’s urban Aboriginal community.

Volunteers will start in March, on Monday nights from 4:00pm to 5:30pm at the Inter-Tribal Youth Centre on 2001 St. Laurent Blvd.

To get involved, please contact Allan Vicaire at: Allan.vicaire@mcgill.ca

Join the Move the Rock Campaign!

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

Join McGill University’s Community in a campaign :

 

Move The Hochelaga Rock

The campaign is set to reclaim history and promote awareness of history that many of the members of the McGill community are unaware of.

The Hochelaga Rock commerates a fortified Iroquoian village of Hochelaga that today McGill occupies. The rock faces a fence on the Lower Field between Roddick Gates and the McLennan library.

It is a terrible location and most students do not know that it exists.

We must reclaim an important part of Iroquoian and Canadian history.

Let us work together and move the rock!

For more Information of the campaign, visit our Facebook Page : http://www.facebook.com/MovetheRock

Aboriginal Student Association at York University Seeks Submissions for March Conference

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

PLAN NORD: Perspectives, Challenges and Promises for Northern Indigenous Communities

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

From our friends over at the ALA:

The Aboriginal Law Students Association, Environmental Law McGill and the International Journal on Sustainable Development Law and Policy are pleased to welcome the public to attend a cross-disciplinary panel discussion bringing together indigenous leaders and community members, researchers, legal practitioners and representatives of civil society organizations to discuss some of the issues arising from the implementation of Plan Nord.

Plan Nord, the Government of Quebec’s ambitious development strategy covering some two thirds of the province’s territory north of the 49th parallel, contemplates the development of the energy, mining, forestry, biofood and transportation sectors across the area. The sought-after land is inhabited by some 33,000 members of the Cree, Inuit, and Innu communities, most of which remain geographically isolated and have been historically marginalized. Advertised as a new model of sustainable development which will reconcile economic, environmental and social aspirations, Plan Nord promises to open an economic space for aboriginal participants and to build a partnership with Aboriginal communities based on respect of indigenous cultures and identities. Yet, many questions remain with regards to the measures which will be taken to flesh out the government’s commitments and achieve its stated goals.

Panelists will aim to provide an analysis of the issues affecting Northern indigenous communities with regards to consultation processes and the eventual implementation of the Government of Quebec’s commitments and constitutional obligations towards Aboriginal communities. The potential impacts of large-scale development projects on indigenous cultures, governance and livelihoods, the promises and pitfalls of sustainable development as a framework for the implementation of Plan Nord and issues of participation in decision-making, governance and self-determination, will be addressed.

PANELISTS:

*   Chief Ghislain Picard, Regional Chief of Quebec and Labrador, Assembly of First Nations

*   Me John Paul Murdoch, attorney

*   Ugo Lapointe, spokesperson for La Coalition Pour que le Québec ait Meilleure Mine!

*   Aurélie Arnaud, Native Women of Quebec Inc.

*   Harry Tulugak, Makivik Corporation (to be confirmed)

*   Professor Colin Scott, Associate Professor, Faculty of Anthropology, McGill University

*   Professor Jaye Ellis, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law and McGill School of Environment

Presentation will be in French or in English

Saturday February 11, 2012, 8:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

Room 100, New Chancellor-Day Hall Building

Faculty of Law, McGill University; 3644 Peel Street

To register, please email Nelly Marcoux before February 6th, at nelly.marcoux@mail.mcgill.ca

This event has been co-sponsored by the Hydro Quebec Fund for Sustainable Development Law and McGill’s Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism.

http://www.facebook.com/events/356911370986386/