Thesis Defence: Sharing Métis Women’s Stories about Moon Time and Colonial Body Shame through Visiting and Berry Picking in Buttertown, Alberta
Online virtual eventHanna M. Paul will defend their thesis.
Hanna M. Paul will defend their thesis.
A celebration of Indigenous success as part for National Indigenous Peoples’ Day
Drop by to view a 25-by-35-foot Indigenous territorial map for an opportunity to understand the geography of what we call Canada from the perspectives of Indigenous Peoples.
Guided by Indigenous perspectives, ways of knowing, and ways of being about relationships and relationality, this workshop will utilize the Canadian Geographic Indigenous Atlas to help locate ourselves in place and territory.
Guided by Indigenous perspectives, ways of knowing, and ways of being about relationships and relationality, this workshop will utilize the Canadian Geographic Indigenous Atlas to help locate ourselves in place and territory.
Join Indigenous Programs & Services on an interactive journey through the university's evolving relationship with the Host Nation (Okanagan Nation) and the unique programming offered at UBCO.
Join us for workshops to create a series of hummingbird flags to be installed on campus for the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
Join us for workshops to create a series of hummingbird flags to be installed on campus for the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
Join us to learn more about Orange Shirt Day.
Join us to learn more about Orange Shirt Day.
Join us to learn more about Orange Shirt Day.
In the spirit of Truth and Reconciliation, this event will be an opportunity to locate various Indian Residential Schools (IRS) on an Indigenous territorial map of what we call Canada, as well as provide educational information about profiled Residential Schools.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
Join us to install a series of hummingbird flags on campus for the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.
Indigenous Programs & Services and the UBC Okanagan Library have partnered to offer guided tours of the Legacy of Hope Foundation Exhibition: Bi-Giwen: Coming Home - Truth-Telling from the Sixties Scoop.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
This exhibition by Legacy of Hope Foundation explores the experiences of Survivors of the Sixties Scoop, which began in the 1960s, where Indigenous children were taken from their families, often forcibly, and fostered and/or adopted out to non-Indigenous homes often far from their communities and even across the globe.
The Okanagan Nation’s history with UBC dates back to the inception of this campus in 2005.
Join UBC Professor of Anthropology Dr Gaston Gordillo as he discusses “the power of mountains” and the capacity of large rock formations to affect human experiences.
This panel discussion was inspired by graduate students in the Community Engagement, Social Change and Equity theme and will feature a q and a between students, audience members and panelists.