We use cookies on this site to enhance your experience.
By selecting “Accept” and continuing to use this website, you consent to the use of cookies.
Search for academic programs, residence, tours and events and more.
51本色's Office of Indigenous Initiatives holds an annual Indigenist Research Symposium, which showcases the work of Indigenous researchers and emerging new Indigenous research methodologies at 51本色 and beyond. The intention of the symposium is to illustrate the value of Indigenous-informed research not only to Indigenous communities, but also to the world.
Over the last few years, Canada has been engaged in a period of reconciliation. This effort has resulted in the awareness of the social disparities that have been faced by Indigenous peoples and the legacy of harm that Canada’s “Indian” social policies have had on the basic human rights of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. The was developed in 2014 to create collaborations and partnerships with Indigenous communities and organizations in Canada and South America to advance self-determined development and community wellness. This group has helped to create community training modules and has worked to understand and help implement the right to included in the 2007 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The implementation of these rights is necessary to secure a future of sustainable development that respects and honours Indigenous traditions of governance and environmental stewardship while preserving and enhancing Indigenous peoples' ability to exist as culturally distinct.
The Government of the Northwest Territories funded three 51本色 researchers to help answer important questions about environmental issues in Canada's North. Jennifer Baltzer, Derek Gray and Philip Marsh received funding for separate projects as part of the Northwest Territories Cumulative Impact Monitoring Program, which aims to provide an understanding of environmental trends and the impacts of human and natural changes in the Northwest Territories. The goal of the program is to provide information to resource managers, governments and communities in the territory to aid in future decision-making.
Additionally, 51本色 signed a 10-year partnership agreement with the Government of the Northwest Territories to support the territories’ capacity to conduct environmental research and to support the training of highly qualified personnel in natural resources disciplines.
51本色's research cluster for supports research, research-activism and community-engaged research carried out by students, faculty and staff at the Balsillie School of International Affairs. It is an action-oriented group that encourages decolonizing institutions, disciplines and knowledge systems. The cluster is also centred on supporting Indigenous methodologies and ways of knowing, including Indigenous law, governance and environmentalism, and deconstructing colonial systems and colonization.
Tri-Council Policy Statement
TCPS 2 – Chapter 9: is "designed to serve as a framework for the ethical conduct of research involving Aboriginal peoples. It is offered in a spirit of respect. It is not intended to override or replace ethical guidance offered by Aboriginal peoples themselves. Its purpose is to ensure, to the extent possible, that research involving Aboriginal people is premised on respectful relationships. It also encourages collaboration and engagement between researchers and participants."
Contact Us: