Edmonton Social Planning Council

Category: Social Issues: Indigenous People

  • Blog post: Unearthing Indigenous Knowledge in the Landscape

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    Written by Nguyen Chu, ESPC volunteer

    “Wisdom sits in places,” Apache elder Dudley Patterson once said (Basso, 1996). For Indigenous Peoples, land is not just a physical space, but a living archive of knowledge, history, and cultural memory. It is a teacher, a storykeeper, and a guide. Through place names, oral traditions, and the very contours of the earth, the landscape encodes and preserves the accumulated wisdom of countless generations.

    Geographic features serve as mnemonic devices for many Indigenous cultures, anchoring survival knowledge, lineages, and moral teachings in the land itself (Basso, 1984). The Inuit of Northwest Greenland use the landscape to recall both local histories and ancient myths (Nuttall, 2001), while the Inuinnait rely on place names to connect people to their environment, making the land a keeper of the community’s memory and values (Collignon, 2006). Anthropologist Julie Cruikshank (1990) found that for the Tlingit and Tagish peoples of the Yukon, place names serve as gateways to the past, allowing them to “use points in space to talk about time.” Oral traditions, too, are tightly braided with the land; these multi-generational stories help recount important events that happened at specific sites, carrying not just the history of a place but also the wisdom and life lessons it embodies (Eco-Hawk, 2000). These themes are shared across Indigenous cultures worldwide, from the songlines of Aboriginal Australians that hold vast geographical, ecological, and cultural knowledge, to the complex glyphs by the foothills of the Andes that anchor NASCA people’s histories and worldviews in the very earth itself (Kelly, 2016).

    Yet the arrival of European settlers disrupted intimate connections. Colonial practices like forced relocation, the creation of reserves, residential schools, and the suppression of Indigenous languages and cultural practices were made with the intention to sever the physical, cultural, and spiritual ties between Indigenous communities and the land (Stojanovik, 2021; UNESCO Canadian Commission, 2021). Moreover, colonialism has been ignoring the evidence of Indigenous oral histories, place names, and archaeological sites that attest to their long-standing presence, justifying the dispossession of Indigenous Peoples from their homelands, rather than acknowledging the complex, localized ways in which colonial encounters have played out (Cruikshank, 2005).

    This deliberate separation of Indigenous Peoples from their lands has led to the rapid and severe erosion of languages and cultures that are deeply intertwined with their specific territories (UNESCO Canadian Commission, 2021).

    Despite these persistent and systemic adversities, Indigenous Peoples have shown remarkable resilience in maintaining and revitalizing their relationships with the land. Across Canada, communities are asserting their rights to their territories and reviving cultural practices and land-based education, which is an educational approach that integrates Indigenous knowledge and practices with Western education (UNESCO Canadian Commission, 2021), creating a new generation of leaders who carry forward the languages, teachings, and responsibilities of the land.

    At the same time, the path toward reconciliation requires non-Indigenous people to have a fundamental shift in our own relationships to land and history by recognizing and respecting Indigenous Peoples’ inherent rights to their traditional territories and supporting their efforts in reclaiming and protecting these lands, honouring the treaties and the relationships of mutual respect and sharing that they represent, and learning from Indigenous knowledge systems that see land not as a resource to be exploited, but instead as a sacred relative and teacher (Cowan, n.d.). As climate change and environmental degradation are threatening the very foundations of our existence, we must learn to listen to the wisdom encoded within the landscape, realizing that our survival is braided with the health of the land and all our relations (UNESCO Canadian Commission, 2021).

    Indigenous land-based knowledge offers a path forward. As we have established, using the landscape itself as a mnemonic device not only makes learning more memorable and enjoyable but also fosters a deeper connection to places and a sense of commitment to protect them. Across Canada, a growing number of schools and communities are already centring Indigenous land-based education in their curriculums (UNESCO Canadian Commission, 2021). These programs are creating a new generation of leaders who carry forward the languages, teachings, and responsibilities of the land. As Joseph-McCullough puts it, “We are creating citizens of Canada to be like no others before them” (2021).

    The land remembers. It carries the stories, the knowledge, and the resilience of Indigenous Peoples. As we try to navigate this turbulent time, may we walk this path of reconciliation together––to honour the living archive of the land, to revive and strengthen the languages and practices that connect us to nature, and to build a future in which all peoples and all beings can thrive.

     

     References

    Basso, K. H. (1996). Wisdom sits in places: Landscape and language among the Western Apache. University of New Mexico Press.

    Canadian Commission for UNESCO. (2021). Land as teacher: Understanding Indigenous land-based education. https://en.ccunesco.ca/idealab/indigenous-land-based-education

    Collignon, B. (2006). Knowing places: The Inuinnait, landscapes, and the environment. Canadian Circumpolar Institute.

    Cowan, J. (n.d.). Indigenous tradition as philosophy [Unpublished manuscript].

    Cruikshank, J. (1990). Life lived like a story: Life stories of three Yukon Native elders. University of Nebraska Press; UBC Press.

    Cruikshank, J. (2005). Do glaciers listen? Local knowledge, colonial encounters, and social imagination. UBC Press.

    Eco-Hawk, R. (2000). The power of place: Native North Americans and Indigenous knowledge. Evergreen State College.

    Kelly, L. (2016). Memory code. Allen & Unwin.

    Nuttall, M. (2001). Locality, identity, and memory in South Greenland. Études/Inuit/Studies, 25(1-2), 53-72.

    Stojanovik, M. (2021). Aboriginal Songlines. Odyssey Traveller.
    https://www.odysseytraveller.com/articles/aboriginal-songlines/

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    1. CC: Not My Home: The Overrepresentation of Indigenous Children in Care

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      Note: This is excerpted from the Community Connected publication. 

      “First Nations children have been dramatically overrepresented in the Canadian child welfare system for more than 50 years” (Blackstock, 2009). According to the 2021 Canadian federal census, 53.8% of children in foster care are Indigenous, but account for only 7.7% of the child population. (Government of Canada, n.d.). It is suggested that Indigenous children are eight times more likely to come into child welfare care than any other children (Blackstock, 2009).

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    2. Research Review: Addressing Indigenous Mental Health: a Journey to Reconciliation

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      The article aims to develop strategies to improve mental health systems in Indigenous communities through a two-day forum in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo. The forum gathered information on what the mental health needs are for this community, and performed interviews with relevant stakeholders to understand what their concerns were. This allowed the authors to develop four key themes that would provide directions and strategies to be followed in order to improve these systems and the Indigenous lives that could benefit from them. 

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    3. CM: Poundmaker’s Lodge and its Role in Combatting The Fear of ‘Stigma’ and its Social Violence 

      [et_pb_section fb_built=”1″ _builder_version=”4.19.2″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=”1″ _builder_version=”4.16″ custom_margin=”0px||0px||false|false” custom_padding=”0px||0px||false|false” global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][et_pb_row column_structure=”3_4,1_4″ use_custom_gutter=”on” _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” width=”100%” custom_margin=”0px||||false|false” custom_padding=”0px||0px||false|false” border_width_bottom=”1px” border_color_bottom=”#a6c942″ global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][et_pb_column type=”3_4″ _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][et_pb_post_title meta=”off” featured_image=”off” _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” title_font=”||||||||” custom_margin=”||3px|||” border_color_bottom=”#a6c942″ global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][/et_pb_post_title][/et_pb_column][et_pb_column type=”1_4″ _builder_version=”4.16″ _module_preset=”default” global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][et_pb_image src=”https://edmontonsocialplanning.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/COLOUR-BLOCKS_spaced-300×51.png” title_text=”COLOUR BLOCKS_spaced” align=”center” _builder_version=”4.7.7″ _module_preset=”default” max_width=”100%” max_height=”75px” custom_margin=”0px|0px|0px|0px|false|false” custom_padding=”10px|0px|20px|0px|false|false” global_module=”96648″ global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][/et_pb_image][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][et_pb_row column_structure=”3_4,1_4″ use_custom_gutter=”on” make_equal=”on” _builder_version=”4.16″ background_size=”initial” background_position=”top_left” background_repeat=”repeat” width=”100%” custom_margin=”0px|auto|0px|auto|false|false” custom_padding=”30px|0px|0px|0px|false|false” global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][et_pb_column type=”3_4″ _builder_version=”4.16″ custom_padding=”0px|0px|0px|0px|false|false” global_colors_info=”{}” custom_padding__hover=”|||” theme_builder_area=”post_content”][et_pb_text _builder_version=”4.16″ _dynamic_attributes=”content” _module_preset=”default” text_font=”|600|||||||” text_text_color=”#2b303a” custom_padding=”||32px|||” global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content”]@ET-DC@eyJkeW5hbWljIjp0cnVlLCJjb250ZW50IjoicG9zdF9kYXRlIiwic2V0dGluZ3MiOnsiYmVmb3JlIjoiIiwiYWZ0ZXIiOiIiLCJkYXRlX2Zvcm1hdCI6ImRlZmF1bHQiLCJjdXN0b21fZGF0ZV9mb3JtYXQiOiIifX0=@[/et_pb_text][et_pb_text _builder_version=”4.19.5″ text_text_color=”#2b303a” text_line_height=”1.6em” header_2_font=”||||||||” header_2_text_color=”#008ac1″ header_2_font_size=”24px” background_size=”initial” background_position=”top_left” background_repeat=”repeat” text_orientation=”justified” width=”100%” module_alignment=”left” custom_margin=”0px|0px|0px|0px|false|false” custom_padding=”25px||||false|false” hover_enabled=”0″ locked=”off” global_colors_info=”{}” theme_builder_area=”post_content” sticky_enabled=”0″]

      By Siobhan Dreelan and Virginia Duran

       

      Mental Health and Wellness can have both positive and negative effects on the individual, family, community, and Nation. In today’s society, you can see people struggling with Mental Health and Wellness negatively – suicides, addictions, homelessness – however what fails to be recognized and/or addressed are the ‘stigmas’ around mental health that limit the possibilities for effective services. These existing stigmas put fear and blame on the individual, while society distances itself from those who are suffering. This is quite problematic because people don’t understand mental health and wellness, although they are quick to judge, deny, and create barriers. 

      Studies have proven that trauma has lasting impacts on people’s mental health, and trauma is experienced every day. For example, losing a job, breakups, losing a loved one, or injuries. Further, we know that intergenerational and historical traumas continue to impact the lives of Indigenous Peoples. The lasting impacts of trauma play out though addictions, chronic negativity, mental unwellness, hopelessness, poverty, violence, and more that continue to plague many people.  

      What is Poundmaker’s Lodge?  

      Poundmaker’s Lodge is a residential treatment service provider that offers two treatment programs, a 42-day program and is open to anyone over the age of 18 and a 90-day program that is structured and guided by Alberta Health Services, which focuses on life skills and is tailored for persons ages 18-24. Poundmaker’s Lodge has a medical detox centre onsite and has some harm reduction strategies particularly in the opioid dependance program. It also offers the Iskwew women’s healing lodge, where women can stay for 3 months to a year where they learn life skills, and gain support, skills and access to counselling, school, volunteer opportunities and employment.  

      Programming at Poundmaker’s Lodge is a combination of Indigenous and Western modalities, a blend of perspectives that provides a unique approach that can start where people are comfortable, provide wrap around care and involves collaborative teamwork.  

      Poundmaker’s Impact 

      Poundmaker’s Lodge works with numerous Indigenous communities who might not otherwise have access to help with substance use. These folks come from all over Treaty 6, including Saskatchewan as Treaty 6 crosses provincial borders. Folks also come from Treaties 7 and 8. Poundmaker’s Lodge offers culturally competent programming including bringing in Indigenous Elders from various different tribes and communities, recognizing that the Indigenous umbrella is broad and encompasses many different groups of people with unique perspectives, experiences and ways of knowing.  

      The idea of representation is incredibly important at Poundmaker’s Lodge, where a person can feel at home around others like themselves. Having people who walk with, and role models recovering from addictions and who talk about mental health is integral to the work of connecting with folks at Poundmaker’s Lodge as a community. As well those at Poundmaker’s Lodge advocate for reducing stigma associated with Indigenous Peoples.  

      Challenges 

      Where there is trauma, healing is the answer. Those who work at Poundmaker’s Lodge find it very difficult for the clients they serve and support to access assessments (psychiatrist), get identification, receive Alberta healthcare, obtain safe and affordable housing, access affordable therapy and medications, peer support, community, follow-up and transition support, and services for those who are hearing and visually impaired.   

      When clients come for intake, Poundmaker’s Lodge admissions team has been noticing that many of the clients are struggling with mental health, and clients have disclosed that it is difficult to get a bed at the Alberta Hospital and the Royal Alexandra Hospital for their mental health needs. It can take months for someone to see a psychiatrist, and for clients that have co-occurring disorders it is very challenging for them to address addictions when their mental health isn’t stabilized. Mental health should come first and then addiction treatment.  

      Funding continues to be a challenge. In part this is because Poundmaker’s Lodge is not recognized by funders as a cultural program. This creates barriers for folks on the Saskatchewan side of Treaty 6 gaining funding to access Poundmaker’s Lodge, because while Treaty 6 extends into Saskatchewan, the funding does not. Another example is the challenge of accessing places where Indigenous medicines can be picked when funders do not have the cultural understanding and competency to understand this is an important part of the healing process.  

      When folks leave treatment at Poundmaker’s Lodge or other community supports, there are not enough resources like housing. Often times the individual is blamed as if they are lacking or should be responsible for the entirety of their situation. The reality is it is societal pressures and factors that contribute to the continued struggles. Poundmaker’s Lodge has recovery coaches who help get people started once they leave the treatment centre and provide the bridge of support for people on their path of recovery as they reintegrate into society. 

      Indigenous Ways of Knowing 

      There are four parts to every person, the mental, emotional, physical and spiritual. Mental wellness and how it intersects with substance use can be seen in all four dimensions, and so healing must happen holistically in all four dimensions. All the quadrants are worked on during programming where clients learn to understand that there are root causes to addiction, including the numbing of trauma.  

      In addition to recognizing and incorporating the 4 quadrants, on the spiritual level the 7 directions are incorporated. Each has a value system, medicine and connectivity with things outside the self. The goal is to work towards the centre, which is the love component – where healing can happen. This further develops into a focus on the self and how actions such as a choice of kindness are the responsibility of the individual and relate to how they can connect to recognize their place and role in the community. 

      Through the Indigenous Ways of Knowing people learn to cope and co-exist with their mental health challenges, because these can continue well after substance use has been addressed.  

       

      Note: This is an excerpt from our December 2022 Community Matters, you can read the full publication here

      Did You Enjoy this Article? Please provide feedback here: Microsoft Forms 

       

      To learn more about Poundmaker’s  Lodge or if you are in need of help:  

      Phone: (780) 458-1884 Toll Free: 1-866-458-1884 Fax: (780) 459-1876 

      Intake : admissions@poundmaker.org  

      Medical Detox : detox@poundmaker.org         

      General : info@poundmaker.org 

       

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      1. Community Matters (July 2022) — Community Safety

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        Note: This is excerpted from the July 2022 edition of our Community Matters publication. 

        Welcome to the second issue of our new quarterly publication, Community Matters.

        As with our inaugural issue in March 2022, Community Matters aims to inform the community about social issues that impact citizens and connect the dots between social issues, evidence, and policy. We aim to use this space to give a voice to local agencies, ESPC volunteer writers, and staff members alike.

        Each edition will spotlight a specific social issue and demonstrate the intersectional nature and impact on equality. Our goal is to use evidence as we continue to inform on the issues affecting individuals and families.

        While our first issue focused on gender (in)equity, this issue will focus on community safety.

        Community safety has many components and facets. Safety can be defined and experienced differently by each community and each person’s unique lived experience. Many think community safety means responding to crimes and social disorders through policing and the criminal justice system, the dialogue needs to be even more broadly focused on preventative measures and promoting social cohesion.

        When discussing community safety, we need to frame the conversation around promoting a community that is inclusive to everyone, especially those who are marginalized. If we center the conversation exclusively to the concerns of dominant or privileged groups, we run the risk of further endangering or marginalizing those who have already been struggling.

        Crime in Chinatown, safety concerns at Edmonton transit facilities, hate-motivated crimes against Black and Muslim women, and the alarming rates of lives lost due to drug overdoses and poisoning are in part tied to the still unresolved social problems such as affordable housing challenges and the rise of homelessness, the closure of safe consumption sites, untreated mental health and trauma, food insecurity, income inequality, systemic racism, gender inequity, and more. A failure to meaningfully address these issues will only exacerbate wider community safety concerns and the incidences of crime.

        A community that addresses everyone’s basic needs and supports, will reduce the number of incidences where police response is necessary. Community safety can be fostered and supported through relationships and connectivity.

        With this issue of Community Matters, we hope to play a part in shifting this mindset and amplifying the voices of those who felt very much unsafe, excluded or isolated in their own communities for quite some time. This edition includes topics surrounding areas of School Resources Officers, Universal Basic Income, Edmonton Indigenous Court, and Food Insecurity; we have input from organizations and agencies like Bear Clan, Community Outreach Transit Team, Neighbourhood Empowerment Team, Boyle MacCauley Health Centre and The Pride Centre. We invite readers to delve deeper into these topics.

        We hope this endeavour broadens the conversation and helps spark positive social change amid a truly challenging period for our city.

        – Susan Morrissey, Executive Director

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      2. Blog: June 27th is the 51st Anniversary of Canadian Multiculturalism Day

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        By Jayme Wong

        Monday, June 27th, 2022 is Canadian Multiculturalism Day. Since 2002, this day marks and celebrates the contributions to Canadian society by individuals of various backgrounds and their diversity [1]. Placed between National Indigenous Peoples Day on June 21st and Canada Day on July 1st, Canadian Multiculturalism Day celebrates the diversity that makes up the nation’s vibrant cultural tapestry. However, is one day a year enough to celebrate and promote multiculturalism?  

        In the simplest sense, multiculturalism is the acknowledgment of multiple cultural identities. In Canada, this means “ensuring that all citizens keep their identities, take pride in their ancestry, and have a sense of belonging” [2]. Multiculturalism is considered an important foundation of Canadian society, having been enshrined by law in the Canadian Multiculturalism Act in 1985. The Act “recognize[s] and promote[s] the understanding that multiculturalism reflects the cultural and racial diversity of Canadian society and acknowledges the freedom of all members of Canadian society to preserve, enhance and share their cultural heritage” [3]. The policy also encourages, fosters, and promotes the advancement of multiculturalism, calling for equitable participation and treatment of all individuals in Canadian society, regardless of cultural, ethnic, or racial origin. How citizens go about finding their sense of belonging is not explicitly prescribed by doctrine and, while Canadian Multiculturalism Day provides an opportunity for Canadians to openly promote and celebrate their cultural heritages, there is no account for how Canadians should address these key features of their identities the other 364 days of the year. 

        Canada’s multiculturalism policy has always stood in stark contrast to the United States’ “melting pot”, which encourages the assimilation of newcomers to one common culture. In recent years, American scholars have denounced the melting pot theory in favour of the “salad bowl”, “where cultures of different shapes and sizes can coexist” [4]. One main difference between Canada’s multiculturalism and America’s salad bowl is that ours is an ideology that has been acknowledged by the government and protected by law. However, whether law is enough to prompt action from the citizenry to make multiculturalism a reality and promote national unity, is still up for debate. 

        Does having multiculturalism enshrined in policy actually make a difference to social attitudes? Both Canadian and American ideas have been the subject of deep scrutiny with proponents of the melting pot/salad bowl theory rejecting multiculturalism and vice versa. Critics of multiculturalism, such as D.C.-based writer, Kenny Xu, suggest that multiculturalism creates differences instead of minimizing them: “[M]ulticulturalists create [a] yawning inequality in our society: between those who believe in and benefit from America’s cultural melting pot and those who reject it and become strangers in their own land” [5]. While others, like Alberta’s former Minister of Culture, Multiculturalism and Status of Women, Leela Sharon Aheer, suggest that the differences are a strength: “Multiculturalism is a choir, where many different voices join together to create beautiful music. It is also the foundation to this province, and the key to building a vibrant and inclusive future” [6]. 

        Regardless of the ongoing debate, both multiculturalism and the melting pot/salad bowl are still just ideas – ideas that stay in text unless they are manifested into reality by actions. While the Canadian Multiculturalism Act does call upon federal institutions to “generally, carry on their activities in a manner that is sensitive and responsive to the multicultural reality of Canada” [3], this includes the ongoing colonization and inhabitation of Indigenous lands and reluctant support for the accommodation of religious diversity [7].  

        Hate incidents in Canada reported by South Asian and Southeast Asian people increased by 318% and 121%, respectively, during 2021 [8].  In 2019, 46% of Black Canadians aged 15+ reported experienced at least one form of discrimination in the past five years [9]. Regardless of the federal government’s mandates, it is up to the citizenry to ensure that Canada’s multiculturalism actually lives up to its name. 

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        This Canadian Multiculturalism Day, I invite you to join the celebrations that are happening around the province. Actively celebrating each other’s cultures and embracing our differences is what enables Canada’s national mosaic. But, remember that multiculturalism includes the good, the bad, and the ugly – the ridges and fractures that appear when multiple cultures come into contact and confront each other for the first time. While the Canadian Multiculturalism Act ensures that there is infrastructure in place to support culturally diverse endeavours, it is the individual actions made by Canadians that ensure multiculturalism’s effectiveness.  

        End of text reference list (chronological): 

        [1] Proclamation Declaring June 27 of each year as “Canadian Multiculturalism Day” (SI/2002-160). Retrieved from the Justice Laws website: https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SI-2002-160/page-1.html 

        [2] Multiculturalism. (2022, May 30). Government of Canada. Retrieved June 19, 2022, from https://www.canada.ca/en/services/culture/canadian-identity-society/multiculturalism.html 

        [3] Canadian Multiculturalism Act. (R.S.C., 1985, c. 24 (4th Supp.)). Retrieved from the Justice Laws website: https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/c-18.7/page-1.html 

        [4] Vidal, Jennifer. (2018, December 16). America the Salad Bowl – but some vegetables are more equal than others. Medium. https://medium.com/immigration-nation/america-the-salad-bowl-4883f9a77ad2 

        [5] Xu, Kenny. (2021, February 16.) What Multiculturalism Has Wrought. City Journal. https://www.city-journal.org/why-immigrants-favor-melting-pot-over-multiculturalism 

        [6] Canadian Multiculturalism Day: Minister Aheer. 2021, June 27. Red Deer News Now. https://rdnewsnow.com/2021/06/27/canadian-multiculturalism-day-minister-aheer/  

        [7] Jedwab, Jack. (2011). Multiculturalism. In The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/multiculturalism 

        [8] Balintec, Jessica. (2022, April 3). 2 years into the pandemic, anti-Asian hate is still on the rise in Canada, report show. CBC. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/2-years-into-the-pandemic-anti-asian-hate-is-still-on-the-rise-in-canada-report-shows-1.6404034 

        [9] Cotter, Adam. (2022, February 16). Experiences of discrimination among Black and Indigenous populations in Canada, 2019. Statistics Canada. https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/85-002-x/2022001/article/00002-eng.htm 

         

         

         

        Jayme has a BA in English and Philosophy from the University of Lethbridge and an MA in English and Film Studies from the University of Alberta. She currently lives in Edmonton with her partner and their cat. 

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