間眅埶AV

Students

Wenona Victor, PhD, Criminology

October 13, 2015

Wenona Victor is using ancient stories to create new possibilities. Victor is an assistant professor with the University of the Fraser Valleys Department of History. She completed a PhD in Criminology focused on Indigenous Governance and Self-Determination at 間眅埶AV in 2012 and was the first Indigenous student to graduate at the doctoral level from this program. Victor is from the Tselxw矇yeqw tribe and is a member of the Skowkale community.

Victors research focuses on revitalizing her peoples traditional cultural knowledge and applying it to contemporary settings. Victor explains that narratives, such as the origin story of of Ll穩lheqi (also known as Mount Cheam), can help First Nation people build resiliency and support communities to build more effective systems of governance.

Our people governed ourselves for thousands of years pre-contact. We survived famines, floods, earthquakes, landslides and raidsand the laws, wisdom and knowledge of how we did that is embodied in the stories, or sxwxwiy獺m, attached to different parts of the land, she says.

One of Victors current research projects aims to reduce suicide rates among Indigenous youth by reconnecting them to the land and helping them relearn traditional sxwxwiy獺m.

We are going to take the youth to places like Ll穩lheqi so that the kids can relate to the land and teachings associated with our territory. We want the kids to see that St籀:l ways of knowing are not 'myths' or 'legends' but are legitimate ways of understanding the world. Ultimately, we hope they will gain a sense of pride and confidence in who we are as a people, says Victor.

Victor is also collaborating with a local womens empowerment group to help reinstate the role of the matriarch in St籀:l society as a guardian of the people.

The Indian Act is not working for us and yet we continue to govern ourselves under it. I feel that we are now at the point where we are ready to stand up and operate outside of the Act. My work is about helping to provide an alternative to that framework and build a stronger governing system and therefore a stronger people, she says.

Helping Indigenous people reconnect with their own cultural knowledge is not a new task for Victor. Prior to entering her doctoral program, she worked for eight years with the St籀:l Nation Justice Department, helping communities resolve conflicts by applying traditional St籀:l forms of justice. Although this role was gratifying, she eventually felt the need to make a larger impact in her community and entered a PhD program at 間眅埶AV.

I wanted to explore governance more broadly and not just in terms of justice. I felt I had done all I could in that area and needed more tools. I ran into Liz Elliott at a conference and she said, 'you should do a PhD.' She planted the seed and Im glad she didthe experience was instrumental to where I am now. My PhD program allowed me to learn from the sxwxwiy獺m and the ultimate resource and keeper of knowledgethe land, she says.

Reposted compliments of the Office of Graduate Studies & Postdoctoral Fellows.

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