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Recommended Resources from Chief Leanne Joe

Tue, 28 Sep 2021

In our On Equity interview series, part of our 2021 Community Summit Series: Towards Equity, we talked to people working towards equity, justice and systemic change. One of the things we ask them is whether they have any recommendations for ways people can engage with these topics.

We interviewed Sxwpilemaát Siyám (Chief Leanne Joe), Lackett Joe Hereditary Chief of the Squamish Nation, and the transformative storyteller for economic reconciliation at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV’s Community Economic Development Program. She went above and beyond with this question, sharing a comprehensive list of recommendations for learning about economic reconciliation and engaging more deeply with Indigenous histories and perspectives.

Take a look at this fantastic collection of resources, including books, podcasts, videos, and free and paid courses and training for individuals and organizations.

On this Page

Courses and Training

  •  is a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) from the University of Alberta's Faculty of Native Studies that explores Indigenous histories and contemporary issues in Canada. From an Indigenous perspective, this course explores key issues facing Indigenous peoples today from a historical and critical perspective highlighting national and local Indigenous-settler relations.
  •  is an online course from the University of British Columbia, taught by Jan Hare. The purpose of the class is to provide community leaders, service workers, teachers and managers with insight into how Indigenous histories, perspectives and worldviews impact learning.
  •  is an online course from Columbia University that examines how Indigenous Peoples have been contesting norms, institutions and global debates in the past 50 years, and how they have been re-shaping and gradually decolonizing these systems at international and national levels.
  •  aims to minimize lateral violence and promote lateral kindness and cultural safety through trauma-informed training programs. As a core value and emphasis for creating meaningful relationships and moving forward, reconciliation is foundational.
  •  offers free and paid in-person and online training programs for every Canadian. They specialize in corporate training. The blog and books are a wealth of knowledge also.
  • Reconciliation Canada's  create a safe place to engage all peoples in Canada in dialogue that increases understanding of our shared history, and explores the meaning of reconciliation and our respective roles to play.
  •  offers workshops, workbooks and other resources for individuals and groups who want to learn about and commit to decolonizing practices.
  •  offers training for leaders and organizations with Squamish-led teachings centred in decolonizing practices, indigenization, reconciliation and self-actualization.
  • Hold or attend a . The Blanket Exercise is based on using Indigenous methodologies and the goal is to build understanding about our shared history as Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in Canada by walking through pre-contact, treaty-making, colonization and resistance. Everyone is actively involved as they step onto blankets that represent the land, and into the role of First Nations, Inuit and later Métis peoples. By engaging on an emotional and intellectual level, the Blanket Exercise effectively educates and increases empathy.
  •  is a set of professional learning guides that are a result of a collaboration between BCcampus, the Ministry of Advanced Education and Skills Training, and a Steering Committee of Indigenous education leaders. The learning series includes guides specifically for teachers and instructors; front-line staff, student services and advisors; leaders and administrators; curriculum developers; and researchers.

Books and More to Read

  •  â€” Tracey Lindberg
  •  â€” Richard Wagamese
  •  â€” Thomas King
  •  â€” Edmund Metatawabin with Alexandra Shimo
  •  â€” Wab Kinew
  •  â€” Bev Sellars
  •  â€” Joseph Boyden
  •  â€” Gord Downie and Jeff Lemire
  •  â€” Patti LaBoucane-Benson
  •  â€” Joseph Auguste Merasty with David Carpenter
  •  â€” Katherena Vermette
  •  â€” Richard Van Camp
  •  â€” Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
  •  â€” edited by Danielle Metcalfe-Chenail
  •  â€” edited by Rick Colbourne and Robert B. Anderson
  •  â€” Arthur Manuel and Grand Chief Ronald Derrickson
  •  â€” Federation of Post-Secondary Educators of BC, edited by Peter McFarlane and Nicole Schabus
  •  â€” Bob Joseph
  •  â€” Bob Joseph with Cynthia F. Joseph
  •  â€” Bob Joseph and Cynthia F. Joseph (only available through taking the  training through Indigenous Corporate Training Inc.)
  •  â€” Bill Gallagher
  •  â€” Carol Anne Hilton
  •  â€” Darrell Dennis
  •  â€” Arthur Manuel and Grand Chief Ronald M. Derrickson
  •  â€” edited by Kiera L. Ladner and Myra J. Tait
  •  â€” Tanya Talaga
  •  â€” Chelsea Vowel
  •  â€” edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale
  •  â€” edited by Christopher Fleming and Matthew Manning (recommended chapter:  â€” Belayet Hossain and Laura Lamb)
  •  â€” Lee Maracle
  •  â€” edited by John Borrows, Larry Chartrand, Oonagh E. Fitzgerald and Risa Schwartz
  •  â€” Chris Andersen
  •  â€” edited by Nathalie Kermoal and Isabel Altamirano-Jiménez
  •  â€” Mark Carney
  •  â€” Charles Eisenstein
  • Anything produced by the , in particular the  and  Red Papers
  •  â€” Mark Podlasly, Suzanne von der Porten, Dara Kelly and Max Lindley-Peart (British Columbia Assembly of First Nations)

Must Watch

  •  (CBC) — A 500-year-old relationship ... coming out of conflict, colonialism and denial. Join Wab Kinew on a two-minute walk through 500 years of aboriginal history and then watch the entire four-part  series.
  •  (CBC) — Chief Robert Joseph shares his experience as a residential school survivor and the importance of truth and reconciliation in Canada.
  •  (CBC) — How well do Canadians know Indigenous history? What role did treaties play in forming our country? Are the stories told through truth and reconciliation changing our understanding of Canadian history?
  •  (TVO) — Is hanging Indigenous art in an office "reconciliation?" In this web series called "First Things First," Indigenous experts take a look at what it really means to reconcile after generations of systemic racism against Indigenous peoples.
  •  (TVO) — Just over five years ago Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its report. In it there were almost 94 recommendations. Now there are 10 that are considered completed and even that is debatable. The TRC was established to research the harms to the Indigenous communities over the practice of sending children to residential schools. What happened as a result has been termed cultural genocide. We look at progress on true reconciliation in Canada.
  •  â€” An immersive website on the 94 Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and a curated selection of Beyond 94 video content, as well as other videos on the theme of reconciliation, are featured in this collection.
  •  â€” Hosted by the University of Manitoba, the TRC legacy lives on here with archived statements and videos, research, reports, etc. available on this website.
  • Any video of  or  is powerful and worth watching.
  •  (TEDxJIBC) — Growing up, many were only exposed to media centered on white characters and white points of view. Today, in the age of reconciliation, the public is hungry to learn more about Indigenous world views. But many are grappling and flailing with education about Indigenous people and communities. Angela Sterritt takes us on a journey of how Indigenous people went from victim, to victors, in the eyes of a slowly learning public.
  •  â€” Unreserved is the radio space for Indigenous community, culture and conversation.
  •  (short film by Andy Keen)
  •  (documentary by Maurice Switzer, Andrée Cazabon and Adam Gualtieri for Reconciliation Education)

Podcasts

Here are some recommendations from ,  and , including:

On Equity Interviews