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219 Reconciliation Resources

Donna Thiessen and Jennifer Baetz

Last update: May 29/25

Collections

Collection of texts in which indigenous voices are prominent by various  (various licenses).

Courses

This is a Canadian created resourcenisitohtamowin ᓂᓯᑐᐦᑕᒧᐃᐧᐣ An Introduction to Understanding Indigenous Perspectives in Canada  by First Nations’ University of Canada  (all rights reserved).

This course is available to all Canadians until September 2025 from the First Nations University of Canada.

Monographs

Indigenous Self-Determination through Mitho Pimachesowin: Perspectives from Northern Saskatchewan  by PKP Publishing Services Network (all rights reserved).

A special issue of The Northern Review focused on northern Saskatchewan perspectives and experience.

Textbooks

A People’s History of Structural Racism in Academia From A to Z by Susan Rahman, Kentfield, CA, Prateek Sunder, Kentfield, CA and Dahmitra Jackson (CC BY).

A U.S. based alphabetical listing of issues related to the legacy of racism that permeates academic culture.

 

Decolonizing the Engineering Curriculum  by Pamela Wolf; Alex Gonzalez; Curtis Rattray; Debalina Saha; James Shaw; Nika Martinussen; and Ben Harris  (CC-BY-NC).

Reconciliation + design is a set of adaptable resources developed to enable Engineering faculty to include Indigenous reconciliation in engineering courses. These resources consist of lecture slides, sample assignments, and rubrics primarily centred around decolonization. Your role will be to teach the decolonization curriculum from your perspective.

This is a British Columbia created resource.Pulling Together: A Guide for Curriculum Developers  by Asma-na-hi Antoine; Rachel Mason; Roberta Mason; Sophia Palahicky; and Carmen Rodriguez de France (CC BY NC).

The Curriculum Developers Guide is part of an open professional learning series developed in British Columbia. These guides are intended to support the systemic change occurring across post-secondary institutions through Indigenization, decolonization, and reconciliation.

Videos

Being Together by Emily Grafton, Jérôme Melançon. (CC-BY-NC-ND)

A living land acknowledgement begins with an understanding of the multiple existing and possible relations to the land and to the peoples who are Indigenous to it. The four videos in this resource feature discussions about traditional ways of life developed in the area surrounding oskana kâ-asastêki / Regina; the genocide that is meant to destroy them; the treaties that were signed to establish ways of being together with the land but served instead to establish Canadian domination; and the challenges and joys of cultural and linguistic revitalization.

 

Media Attributions

 

 

License

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