Dec. 3, 2019
Killam Visiting Professor sees how law is like a set of stories
When Dr. Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark looks at Canadian laws, she sees much more than聽statutes, torts and jurisprudence. She sees 鈥渁 kind of creation story鈥 for the country that has colonialism and gender violence written right into it.
Stark, the 2019 Killiam Visiting Professor, is associate professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Victoria. A Turtle Mountain Anishinaabekwe (North Dakota), she studies Indigenous politics and law, treaty rights, and how Indigenous and non-Indigenous people can live together with mutual respect and responsibility. 鈥淚 try to juxtapose story and law together to think through how we narrate ourselves as nations and also how stories can help us rethink what kinds of nations we want to be and how we want to relate to one another,鈥 she says.
Since arriving in Calgary in September, Stark has given a guest lecture to law students about her role as expert witness in Anishinaabe law for a treaty case, a聽brown bag talk in the political science department about Indigenizing the academy, and a public lecture about consent and the law.
It's been a really welcoming environment and a great opportunity to engage with a lot of different thinkers around ways of thinking about what productive Indigenous state relations can look like.
She鈥檚 also been continuing her work with her former PhD student, Dr. Gina Starblanket, now assistant professor of political science in the Faculty of Arts, on revitalizing Anishinaabe law for resource management, zoning and other land activities on the Zagim膿 Anishinab膿k, a First Nation in Saskatchewan.
Stark has written a chapter about gender violence and colonialism for Visions of the Heart: Issues Involving Indigenous Peoples in Canada (5th edition),聽a book co-edited by Starblanket (a will be held Dec.聽4 at noon to 1:30 p.m. in room SS729). 鈥淚t's a real revamping, if you will, of that textbook, which has been a primary textbook in the field of Indigenous studies and Indigenous politics for a long time at the undergraduate level,鈥 she says.
Across her wide range of scholarly activities, Stark is heartened to see some evidence of progress toward reconciliation.聽鈥淚 do think there had been a lot of advances,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think that Canada is making progress by really questioning law, by making sure to think of law and at least the constitution as these living traditions that we can modify and shift and change.鈥澛
Having more Indigenous scholars and programming in post-secondary-institutions helps too. Teaching undergraduate and graduate students about Indigenous politics and law can 鈥済o a long way鈥 in helping transform how we think about each other and get us closer to reconciliation. The 草莓污视频导航聽indigenous strategy,聽ii' taa'poh'to'p, is based on a foundation of compassion through cross-cultural聽learning opportunities that promote awareness, education, and understanding.
鈥淲e're all living in a world of stories鈥 she says. 鈥淭he moment we start to think about law as a set of stories is the moment we can start to really question law in a much more impactful way and think about ways to transform it so that we're not stuck with a kind of legal doctrine that will never get us where we want to go as nations, both Indigenous and Canada alike.鈥
The Killam Visiting Scholar award is made possible through special endowment funds provided by the Killam Trust. The award sponsors a distinguished scholar who will make a significant contribution to the academic life of the 草莓污视频导航.聽The 草莓污视频导航 is one of only six Killam institutions in Canada, each holding a Killam Trust endowed by the will of Dorothy Johnston Killam.聽.
The next call for nominations for the聽聽will be sent to the university community in May聽2020. In the meantime, consider nominating your colleagues for other prestigious awards listed in the聽.