Skip to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
Sign out
Sign in
to online tools
UVic
Search
UVic home
COVID-19
Admissions
Academics
Research
Library
Students
Faculty & staff
Online tools
Return to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
University
of Victoria
Indigenous Studies
Search
Search
Search
Search
Search Indigenous Studies
Search for people
Search for departments
Search for experts
Search for news
Search for resources
Navigation
Home
Programs & courses
Community
Our people
In this section
home
news
Indigenous news from UVic
Indigenous Resurgence Coordinator
Chaw-win-is is the recently appointed Indigenous Resurgence Coordinator within the Faculty of Education. “This position and others initiatives like it across Canada,” says Chaw-win-is, “are a result of the on-going efforts of Indigenous peoples and non-Indigenous allies all across Canada who have been generating awareness about colonization within the education system.”
MAPs for Indigenous language learning
Adult learners are a "missing generation" in Indigenous language revitalization. The majority of fluent speakers are 70 years of age or older and although young children in immersion are speaking their languages in increasing numbers, many Indigenous adults aged 18 to 60 do not. Onowa McIvor (Indigenous education) and Peter Jacobs (linguistics) just wrapped up the first study of the Mentor-Apprentice Program for Indigenous adult language learners in BC.
Indigenous law graduate student wins top Canadian research award
UVic Law PhD student Aaron Mills was awarded the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) Talent award. The award is given to a single student each year across all the disciplines of the humanities and social sciences in Canada whose research "brings forward ideas that help us understand and improve the world around us." Mills' work is at the forefront of the movement to restore and revitalize Indigenous systems of law.
Bridging legacies and supports
When her job as a Youth Care Worker with the Cariboo-Chilcotin school district was cut last June, Mikara Pettman, 42, was worried. A happy, productive woman—an equal family partner, mother to two teens and active in her community—suddenl…
Hishuk ish tsawalk—everything is one
"There's a concept in Nuu-chah-nulth culture called hishuk ish tsawalk," says Marcena Wika Louie, one of the first cohort of the Indigenous Communities Counselling Psychology (ICCP) program graduating in November. "It means everything is connected, everything is one. That's the basis of my holistic approach to counselling."
Mapping with the Stó:lō
Sabina Trimble—who graduates this month with an MA in history—will don a mortarboard on Nov. 9, but her fondest memory as a student was being blanketed and given a hand-woven cedar hat, in a traditional Coast Salish honouring at her defence in August 2016.
Fires among tools of First Nations forestry
Two recently published research papers show how coastal forests benefited from First Nations habitation, and that fire-management was an important element of Indigenous forestry.
Banting fellows shed light on Indigenous language, orca survival
An endangered Indigenous language and an endangered West Coast wildlife icon stand to benefit from the work of two new Banting Postdoctoral Fellows at UVic. Valued at $70,000 per year for two years, the fellowships are intended to groom Canada's next generation of research leaders.
UVic, First Nations journey together to return ancestral remains
In a solemn ceremony last Friday, members of the Esquimalt and Songhees Nations and UVic journeyed together to return ancestral remains that had been stored in the Department of Anthropology to their community of origin on Lekwungen traditional lands.
Aboriginal entrepreneurs program awarded
The Northwest Aboriginal Canadian Entrepreneurs (NW-ACE) program, which provides business skills training in northern BC Indigenous communities, took home the top prize at the Gold Global Best Awards ceremony in Oslo, Norway last month in recognitio…
October 2016 Ringers
The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) has named the finalists for the 2016 Impact Awards. UVic was the only school with two finalists—law PhD candidate Aaron Mills and historian Dr. John Lutz. Separately, UVic Vice-President Research Dr. David Castle has joined the board of CANARIE.
IN DEFIANCE: A new exhibit
Premiering Oct. 8 at Legacy Downtown, IN DEFIANCE by Iroquois Mohawk artist Lindsay Kat Katsitsakatste Delaronde showcases individual portraits that deliberately dismantle negative stereotypes of First Nations women. The new exhibition will also feature a moderated discussion on Oct. 22.
< Newer
1
2
…
23
24
Older >
RSS Feed
Navigation
Content
Quick links
In this section
News
Contact us
Return to
global menu
.
Return to
primary navigation
.
Return to
secondary navigation
.
Return to
page content
.