{PDF EPUB} a Concise History of Canada's First Nations by Olive Patricia Dickason Olive Dickason

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

{PDF EPUB} a Concise History of Canada's First Nations by Olive Patricia Dickason Olive Dickason Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} A Concise History of Canada's First Nations by Olive Patricia Dickason Olive Dickason. Olive Dickason’s book Canada’s First Nations: A History of Founding Peoples from Earliest Times (1992) was awarded the 1993 Sir John A. Macdonald Prize for best scholarly book in Canadian history. Dickason was the first scholar in Canada to receive a PhD in Indigenous history. Early Life. Olive Dickason’s father, Englishman Frank Williamson, was an importer/exporter for the Bank of Montreal. Her mother, schoolteacher Phoebe Philomène Côté, kept her Métis heritage hidden. Dickason and her sister Alice went to a private Catholic school in Winnipeg until the stock market crash in October 1929 ended their father’s banking career. After an unsuccessful attempt at gold mining north of Winnipeg, he went broke. Dickason was 13. The family eked out a living in the bush in northern Manitoba, where Dickason and Alice learned hunting, fishing and trapping from their mother. A Scottish intellectual neighbour introduced Dickason to classic literature, philosophy, Marxism and London newspapers. At age 18, Dickason went to Winnipeg by boat with only the clothes on her back. Once in the city, she hired herself out as a maid and tried to sell magazines door to door in rural southern Manitoba and Saskatchewan. But it was the Depression and farmers had little money. Education. Olive Dickason completed grade 10 by correspondence but due to the Depression, her father could not afford to enroll her in grade 11. After she impressed maverick priest Père Athol Murray with her intellect, he accepted her as the lone girl in his all-boys namesake Notre Dame College in Wilcox, Saskatchewan. Mentored by Murray, Dickason studied for a bachelor’s degree while freelancing for the Regina Leader-Post . She graduated in 1943 from Athol Murray College of Notre Dame with a Bachelor of Arts in French and philosophy. Family and Early Journalism Career. Olive Dickason began a job as a general assignment reporter at the Regina Leader-Post in 1941, where she remained until 1946. While working in Regina, she met some of her mother’s relatives and became aware of her Métis roots for the first time. She married reporter Anthony Dickason in 1946. While he worked at the Winnipeg Tribune , she reported at the Winnipeg Free Press for a year, until 1947. They had three daughters: Anne, Clare and Roberta. When Dickason and her husband moved to Montreal, she spent three years freelancing, mostly for industrial magazines. After her marriage ended, she began working as a general reporter for the Montreal Gazette , then became their women’s editor. In her new job, she visited New York’s fashion wholesalers and haute couture hot spots but remained unimpressed by high-status life. Dickason considered the fuss over the latest clothes and accessories trivial. Despite her position at the Gazette , Dickason spent years struggling with her ex-husband’s unpaid debts. Due to Dickason’s dire financial circumstances in the 1950s, her children spent seven years with a foster family in a rural area outside Montreal. She fought to keep all three girls together and visited them regularly. When Dickason’s oldest daughter was 12, the girls were returned to her care. Career at the Globe and Mail. In 1955, Olive Dickason moved to Toronto, where she became women’s editor at the Globe and Mail . For 12 years, she wrote about local and international fashion trends, although she still had some contempt for the topics. As editor, she nurtured young journalists Michele Landsberg and Barbara Frum, who later became Canadian media success stories. In 1956 and 1958, Dickason won top Elizabeth Arden Awards for fashion reporting. In the 1960s, she received two Judy Awards for fashion writing and two MacLaren technical awards for typography and page layouts. Post-graduate Education. At age 47, with her children grown, Olive Dickason left her Globe job and took several history courses at the University of Ottawa. While studying, she did public relations for the National Gallery of Canada. Years after viewing some early Indigenous artifacts on loan to the gallery, she said, “The pieces spoke to me. I felt like I knew all about them. I guess it’s what they refer to as racial memory.” ( See also Repatriation of Artifacts.) This new awareness inspired her to research Indigenous history in North America. At age 50, Dickason applied to a Master of History program at the University of Ottawa. It was 1970: mature students of her age were almost nonexistent. But Dickason was determined to improve the historical record of Canada’s First Nations and write about Indigenous Canadians in French Canada. Until then, not one history PhD candidate had written a dissertation on First Nations history in Canada. The scholarly field of Indigenous studies barely existed, and she had trouble finding a thesis advisor. Later, Dickason recalled a prevalent attitude at the time: “There’s no historical evidence. The Indians were an oral society and without written documentation, you can’t have history.” Dickason completed her master’s thesis Louisburg and the Indians: A Study in Imperial Race Relations 1713-1760 and graduated in 1972 with an MA. But she still felt driven to prove that thriving, productive Indigenous civilizations had survived for centuries in North America before Europeans arrived. Dickason received a PhD in Indigenous Canadian history in 1977. The University of Alberta Press published her doctoral dissertation The Myth of the Savage and the Beginnings of French Colonialism in the Americas in 1984 . Academic and Publishing Career. Following her PhD, Olive Dickason began lecturing at the University of Alberta and received tenure as a full professor in 1985. Her scholarly articles and significant books, now part of curricula across the globe, brought her recognition as Canada’s foremost expert on Indigenous and Métis history. Dickason’s book Canada’s First Nations: A History of Founding Peoples from Earliest Times (1992) was awarded the 1993 Sir John A. Macdonald Prize for best scholarly book in Canadian history (now known as the Canadian Historical Association Best Scholarly Book Prize in Canadian History). A fourth edition, updated by historian David T. McNab, was published in 2009 by Oxford University Press. Dickason also wrote Indian Arts in Canada (1972) and Visions of the Heart (1996), with updated editions Visions of the Heart: Canadian Aboriginal Issues (2010) and Visions of the Heart: Issues Involving Aboriginal Peoples in Canada (2016), both with David Long. In addition, she wrote A Concise History of Canada’s First Nations (2010) and Indigenous Peoples Within Canada: A Concise History (2018), both with William Newbigging. Dickason also edited The Native Imprint: The Contribution of First People’s to Canada’s Character (1995) and wrote freelance Globe and Mail reviews of books such as Stolen from Our Embrace , which addressed the federal government’s policy of placing Indigenous children in residential schools. Dickason retired at age 72. She died 12 March 2011 in Ottawa and is buried in that city’s Beechwood Cemetery. Significance and Legacy. Dickason contributed enormously to Canadians’ understanding and knowledge of Indigenous and Métis people. As a journalist, professor and scholar, she served as an inspirational role model for students, women and her Métis community. The Gabriel Dumont Institute has a collection of Dickason’s letters, articles and related materials. An exhibit at Quebec’s Canadian Museum of Civilization pays tribute to Dickason and her books. At the University of Calgary, the First Nations Student Association and The Native Centre present the Dr. Olive Dickason Award to an Indigenous student who has overcome extreme challenges to achieve success and graduate. The University of Alberta dedicated a room to her in 2017 while Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario, has the Olive Dickason Reading Room for students enrolled in Indigenous Studies. ISBN 13: 9780195432428. A Concise History of Canada's First Nations, second edition, is a revised, streamlined edition of the award-winning Canada's First Nations: A History of Founding Peoples from Earliest Times, designed to make First Nations' history more accessible to a broader readership. This edition contains a new final chapter covering Prime Minister Stephen Harper's 2008 apology to residential school survivors, the Caledonia land dispute in Ontario, and the First Nations Governance Act. In addition to more than 70 maps and illustrations, it includes numerous boxes highlighting specific subjects, review questions, an extensive glossary of important names and terms, and a list of useful websites. "synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title. Olive Patricia Dickason , is Professor Emeritus, University of Alberta, and adjunct Professor of History, University of Ottawa, is the author of several books, including The Myth of the Savage (1984, 1997) and The Law of Nations and the New World, with L.C. Green (1989). Dr Dickason is a Member of the Order of Canada and recipient of the Aboriginal Life Achievement Award, Canadian Native Arts Foundation. Through her distinguished career she has remained proud of her Métis heritage. William Newbigging is an associate Professor and head of the history department at Algoma University. He has taught Aboriginal history for nearly 10 years. Dr Newbigging also makes a point of regularly attending Aboriginal learning conferences and Native studies workshops in order to learn more about the needs of Aboriginal students. He has recently finished his first book, History of French-Ottawa Alliance, to be published with University of Nebraska Press. Concise History of Canada's First Nation - 2nd edition. A Concise History of Canada's First Nations, second edition, is a revised, streamlined edition of the award-winning Canada's First Nations: A History of Founding Peoples from Earliest Times, designed to make First Nations' history more accessible to a broader readership.
Recommended publications
  • Olive Dickason
    Dickason first became aware of her Métis ancestry as a young adult upon meeting some Métis relatives in Regina. Honouring her ancestors properly became a goal that would give her future academic work the deepest personal meaning. But before that, she entered the workforce. She began a 24-year career in journalism at the Regina Leader-Post and subsequently, worked as a writer and editor at The Winnipeg Free Press, The Montreal Gazette, and The Globe and Mail. She pro- moted coverage of First Nations and Women’s issues, becoming the Women’s Editor at both The Montreal Gazette, and later The Globe and Mail’s daily newspaper and magazine. At age 50, Dickason decided to continue her education, entering the Graduate program at the University of Ottawa. She had to struggle with faculty preconceptions regarding Aboriginal History – including arguments that it did not exist – before finally finding a professor to act as her academic advisor. Dickason completed her Master’s degree at the Olive Patricia Dickason University of Ottawa in 1972, at the age of 52. She Honorary Doctor of Letters went on to successfully defend her Doctoral Thesis, entitled The Myth of the Savage. Born in Winnipeg, Olive Dickason is widely Dickason then authored Canada’s First Nations: acknowledged as the key figure in making A History of Founding Peoples from the Earliest Times, Aboriginal History serious study in Canada’s the most definitive text on the subject at the time, academic world. and still widely in use. She has had to face much adversity in her life and, Dickason taught at the University of Alberta from throughout, she has persevered in the roles of student, 1975 to 1992, and is currently an adjunct professor journalist, mother, scholar, elder, and role model.
    [Show full text]
  • National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation
    NATIONAL ABORIGINAL ACHIEVEMENT FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2006/2007 • Table of Contents Message from the Chair. page 2 Message from the CEO . page 3 National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation . page 5 Corporate Development . page 6 Communications . page 6 Finance & Operations . page 7 Education . page 7 Special Projects . page 8 Taking Pulse. page 10 Blueprint for the Future . page 12 The 2007 National Aboriginal Achievement Awards . page 14 The 2007 National Aboriginal Achievement Award Recipients . page 16 Special Named Scholarships . page 18 2006-2007 Scholarship Recipients . page 19 Supporters . page 49 Financial Statements. page 55 Message from the Chair of the Board As we move forward, we find ourselves on stronger ground, as The reason for the Foundation’s existence, our First Nations, we have overcome a number of challenges these past few years Inuit and Métis youth of Canada, never cease to amaze me as to owing much to the leadership of Roberta Jamieson. Her drive their resiliency, and their ability to overcome challenges in order and determination to bring the Foundation into the 21st to pursue their dreams. The Aboriginal youth of Canada exude Century ensuring that we are providing the standard of service the promise of greatness and I am honoured to serve them as that the Foundation has become known for – Excellence – is part of the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation, they remarkable and we are grateful to have a person such as Roberta truly are Canada’s future. leading the Foundation. On behalf of the Board of Directors, I congratulate her and the Foundation staff for another fantastic The future is bright due to the continued support of our many job well done.
    [Show full text]
  • 2002-03 MIH Media Guide
    2002-03 Bemidji State Men’s Ice Hockey Table of Contents IFC Tradition Never Graduates 1 Table of Contents 2 BSU Hockey Quick Facts 2 2002-03 Season Outlook 4-6 Coaching & Support Staff 4 Head Coach Tom Serratore 5 Assistant Coaches Bert Gilling & Shawn Kurulak 6 Grad Assistant Marc Lafl eur & Support Staff 7-20 2002 Bemidji State Beavers 7 2002 Roster 8-18 Returning Student-Athlete Bios 19 Incoming Student-Athlete Bios 20 Pre-Season Line Chart 21-26 2002-03 Opponents 21-22 Non-Conference Opponents 23-24 College Hockey America opponents 24 2002-03 Travel Itineraries 25 Series Records vs 2002-03 Opponents 26 2002-03 College Hockey America Composite Schedule 27-40 2001-02 Season in Review 27 A Look Back at 2001-02 28 2001-02 Schedule & Results 29 2001-02 Final Statistics 30-31 2001-02 Player Game-by-Game Scoring 30 BSU’s record when... 31 The Last Time 32-37 2001-02 Game Recaps 38 College Hockey America 39 2001-02 CHA Recap 40 CHA Players of the Week / Statistical Leaders 41-67 BSU History and Records 41 Year-by-Year Results 42-47 All-Time Results 47 All-Time Series Standings 48-49 Year-by-Year Team Stats 50-51 Individual Year-by-Year Statistical Leaders 52-53 Individual Career Scoring Leaders 52 BSU Career Records 53 Division I-era Scoring Leaders 54 Individual Career Goaltending Leaders 54 BSU Season and Game Records 55 Team Records / Individual Single-Season Leaders 56-57 R.H. “Bob” Peters 58-61 BSU’s 13 National Champions 62-65 BSU Hockey Alumni 66-67 BSU All-Americans 68-76 Welcome to Bemidji State University 68 Welcome to Bemidji 69 Bemidji State University 70-71 John S.
    [Show full text]
  • Which Canadian Charities Had the Largest Assets in 2015?
    www.canadiancharitylaw.ca Which Canadian charities had the largest assets in 2015? By Mark Blumberg (June 10, 2017) We recently reviewed the T3010 information for 2015. It covers about 84,442 of the 86,000 registered charities that have so far filed their return and that have been entered into the CRA’s database. Canadian registered charities are currently required to disclose on the T3010 their assets. The total assets of all the 84,442 registered charities were about $397,833,310,726.00. Below we have a table of Canadian charities that had assets of over $10 million as identified for the 2015 fiscal year. Thank you to Celeste Bonas, an intern at Blumbergs, for helping with this project. The Sean Blumberg Transparency Project is in memory of my youngest brother Sean Blumberg. Sean was a sweet, kind person, a great brother who helped me on a number of occasions with many tasks including the time consuming and arduous task of reviewing T3010 databases and making them into something useful. As part of the Sean Blumberg Transparency Project, Blumbergs has been releasing information on the Canadian charity sector to provide a better understanding of the size, scope, complexity and challenges of the sector. Please review my caveats at the end about the reliability and usage of T3010 information. 1 www.canadiancharitylaw.ca List of Canadian charities with the largest assets in 2015 Line 4200 Name of Canadian Registered Charity Largest assets 1. THE MASTERCARD FOUNDATION $12,704,351,331.00 2. ALBERTA HEALTH SERVICES $10,140,366,000.00 3.
    [Show full text]
  • From Truth to Reconciliation : Transforming the Legacy of Residential Schools
    AHF_School_cover_JAN23.qxd:Layout 1 1/23/08 3:57 PM Page 1 RESILIENCE OF THE FLOWER BEADWORK PEOPLE Christi Belcourt 1999 Acrylic on Canvas We have survived through incredible odds. We very easily could have been absorbed into the mainstream society. The pressures were there from all sides. No matter. We are here. Despite direct assimilation attempts. Despite the residential school systems. Despite the strong influences of the Church in Métis communities to ignore and deny our Aboriginal heritage and our Aboriginal spirituality. We are still able to say we are proud to be Métis. We are resilient as a weed. As beautiful as a wildflower. We have much to celebrate and be proud of. – Christi Belcourt (excerpt from www.belcourt.net) T r a F n s r BLOOD TEARS f o o Alex Janvier r m m 2001 i Acrylic on linen n T g From Truth to Reconciliation th r Painted on the artist’s 66 birthday, t u h Blood Tears is both a statement of e t Transforming the Legacy of Residential Schools Mr. Janvier’s sense of loss and a h L celebration of his resilience, made all e t g the more powerful with the inclusion o a c of a lengthy inscription painted in his y R own hand on the rear of the canvas. o e f The inscription details a series of c R losses attributed to the ten years o e he spent at the Blue Quills Indian s n i d Residential School: loss of childhood, c e language, culture, customs, parents, Aboriginal Healing Foundation i n l t grandparents, and traditional beliefs.
    [Show full text]
  • Resources Pertaining to First Nations, Inuit, and Metis. Fifth Edition. INSTITUTION Manitoba Dept
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 400 143 RC 020 735 AUTHOR Bagworth, Ruth, Comp. TITLE Native Peoples: Resources Pertaining to First Nations, Inuit, and Metis. Fifth Edition. INSTITUTION Manitoba Dept. of Education and Training, Winnipeg. REPORT NO ISBN-0-7711-1305-6 PUB DATE 95 NOTE 261p.; Supersedes fourth edition, ED 350 116. PUB TYPE Reference Materials Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MFO1 /PC11 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS American Indian Culture; American Indian Education; American Indian History; American Indian Languages; American Indian Literature; American Indian Studies; Annotated Bibliographies; Audiovisual Aids; *Canada Natives; Elementary Secondary Education; *Eskimos; Foreign Countries; Instructional Material Evaluation; *Instructional Materials; *Library Collections; *Metis (People); *Resource Materials; Tribes IDENTIFIERS *Canada; Native Americans ABSTRACT This bibliography lists materials on Native peoples available through the library at the Manitoba Department of Education and Training (Canada). All materials are loanable except the periodicals collection, which is available for in-house use only. Materials are categorized under the headings of First Nations, Inuit, and Metis and include both print and audiovisual resources. Print materials include books, research studies, essays, theses, bibliographies, and journals; audiovisual materials include kits, pictures, jackdaws, phonodiscs, phonotapes, compact discs, videorecordings, and films. The approximately 2,000 listings include author, title, publisher, a brief description, library
    [Show full text]
  • Windspeaker February 1996
    --.11., QUOTABLE QUOTE "National Chief Mercredi's actions and statements are an insult to the chiefs." - Manitoba Grand Chief Phil Fontaine '2 00 where applicable PUBLICATION MAIL REGISTRATION k2177 13 No. IO FEBRUARY 1996 Canada's National Aboriginal News Publication Volume POSTAGE PAID AT EDMONTON Thumbs up for treaties VANCOUVER Negotiation is the only acceptable and civilized way for Native people and the government to deal with the complex issues of Abo- riginal title and rights in the province of British Columbia, said Chief Joe Mathias. He was responding to a new study, conducted by ARA Con- sulting Group of Vancouver, which found land claim treaties have a positive effect in regards to economic opportunity, community development and improved relations between Aboriginal and non- Aboriginal people. "The strength of this report is that it provides an independent and balanced perspective of the issues, challenges and opportuni- ties of treaty- making," said Mathias. "It is a critically important and timely document, one we expect will generate constructive public debate in the months ahead." The study found that modern day treaties have not caused the kind of disruption and disharmony their critics contend they do, but neither do they offer instant solutions. A summary report pre- pared by Ken Coates of the University of Northern British Colum- bia said the resolution of long- standing disagreements, through negotiation rather than through legal or politically imposed con- ditions, will liberate people from the contentious and difficult de- bates of the past. "These often heated discussions - about colonialism, disloca- tion, sovereignty, ownership, and the legitimacy of Native land claims - generate a great deal of rhetoric and anger but rarely pro- vide lasting solutions," concludes the summary.
    [Show full text]
  • The University Preparatory School of Choice for Scholar-Athletes Since 1920
    Athol Murray College of Notre Dame 1 The university preparatory school of choice for Scholar-Athletes since 1920. 2 Athol Murray College of Notre Dame 1 TABLE OF CONTENts VISION STRUGGLE AND EMERGE: A 95 YEAR HIstORY ATHOL MURRAY COLLEGE OF NOTRE 01 VISION, MISSION & DAME IS A PRIVATE, INDEPENDENT In 1920, the Sisters of Charity of St. Louis opened the Notre Dame of the Prairies Convent HISTORY CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL COMMITTED and st. augustine residential elementary and high school for boys and girls in Wilcox, TO DEVELOPING YOUNG MEN AND saskatchewan, a small town on the Canadian prairies. out of the dust and despair of the PROVIDING THE WOMEN TO BECOME PURPOSEFUL 03 great depression emerged what would become athol murray College of notre dame, the TOOLS FOR SUCCESS LEADERS WITH VIRTUOUS CHARACTER “toughest little College” that would survive economic hardship, break down religious and a global mind-set. BOARDING AT NOTRE barriers and challenge students to excel academically, athletically and spiritually. Father 05 DAME athol murray manifested his dream of partnering with an established university – the LEADERSHIP University of ottawa – to offer a liberal arts degree program, which became available in 06 OPPORTUNITIES MIssION 1933. notre dame is rooted in the Catholic tradition, open to students of all faiths and ATHOL MURRAY COLLEGE OF NOTRE backgrounds. as “Père” murray said, “open-mindedness is the nature of the thing”. 07 NOTRE DAME STAFF DAME IS DEDICATED TO PROVIDING STUDENTS WITH AN EXCEPTIONAL Père valued athletics as a way to teach values like commitment, teamwork and leadership. EDUCATIONAL AND BOARDING Père once shouted to his hockey team, mid-game, “skate, you hounds, skate!” and the NOTRE DAME HOCKEY EXPERIENCE WITH A BALANCE OF 08 name stuck.
    [Show full text]
  • 2013-14 Men's Hockey Media Information
    2013-14 MEN’S HOCKEY MEDIA INFORMATION 2013-14 MEN’S HOCKEY MEDIA INFORMATION MEN’S HOCKEY CONTACT LEANN PARKER Office Phone: 614-688-0294 Cell Phone: 614-266-4309 E-mail: [email protected] OHIO STATE ATHLETICS COMMUNICATIONS CREDENTIAL REQUESTS WEEKLY INTERVIEWS Associate Athletics Director/Communications...... Dan Wallenberg In order to qualify for a credential, an applicant must represent Head coach Steve Rohlik and his staff can best be reached during Director.........................................................................Leann Parker the recognized news organization requesting credentials. Please the morning hours, when in town, in the men’s hockey office at Associate Directors ............................... Jerry Emig, Adam Widman contact Leann Parker, athletics communications director, for 614-292-0820. Media wishing to conduct interviews with student- Assistant Directors...............................Alex Morando, Brett Rybak, information on how to apply for single game or season credentials. athletes should contact Leann Parker. Please call at least one day in Danielle Warner, Kendra Willard advance to allow setup time. One day a week (typically Wednesday) Communications Assistants......................Julie Brown, Ben Vondal CREDENTIAL PICKUP before or after practice usually is reserved for the media. Website ......................................... OhioStateBuckeyes.com Credentials may be picked up at the media entrance on the north Main Office Phone .......................................... 614-292-6861 side of
    [Show full text]
  • 2009-10 Calgary Flames Media Guide
    2009-10 Calgary Flames MEDIA GUIDE 30 Years in the Making 1980-2010 1 CALGARY FLAMES 1980-2010 IN THE MAKING Calgary Flames 30th Anniversary Patch Free with purchase of any Flames Adult or Youth Jersey during the 2009-10 regular season. FANATTIC STORE LOCATIONS Calgary Airport Pengrowth Saddledome North Hill Centre 2000 Airport Rd. N.E. 555 Saddledome Rise S.E. 1632 - 14th Ave. N.W. Calgary, AB Calgary, AB Calgary, AB 403-571-9755 403-571-9770 403-338-2080 or call: 1-877-477-2177 Visit Calgary’s Authentic Team Store Today! www.flamesport.com 2 CALGARY FLAMES 30 Years in 30the yearsMaking 1 CALGARY FLAMES In Memory of Daryl K. “Doc” Seaman Last season, the Calgary Flames mourned the loss of one of the hockey club’s original owners. Daryl K. “Doc” Seaman passed away on Sunday, January 11, 2009. He was 86. Mr. Seaman was one of the original six owners and was instrumental in purchasing and bringing the Atlanta Flames and the National Hockey League to Calgary in 1980. His brother Byron, Ralph T. Scurfield, Norm Green, Normie Kwong and Harley Hotchkiss were also among the first owners. “I’ve lost a dear friend of 55 years and I have lost the best partner a man could have,” said fellow Flames owner, lifetime Daryl K. Seaman friend and business associate Hotchkiss. 1922 - 2009 “People should know that the Flames were Doc’s initiative and Doc’s idea. There would have been no Flames in Calgary were it not for Doc. Those who care about our team and the game owe him a debt of gratitude.” “If anyone is looking for inspiration or a hero, they can stop looking.
    [Show full text]
  • First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health and the Law: a Framework for the Future
    First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health and the Law: A Framework for the Future Yvonne Boyer Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the LLD degree in Law Faculty of Law University of Ottawa ©Yvonne Boyer, Ottawa, Canada, 2011 First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health and the Law: A Framework for the Future Yvonne Boyer Abstract First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health and the Law: A Framework for the Future charts the development of ill health from a formerly healthy, disease-free Aboriginal society pre-contact. However, because of historical factors and events, Aboriginal health was shaped through many Canadian laws, legislation and policies that were detrimental to not only the social fibre of Aboriginal people but to their physical health. Today, there is a stark difference between the health of Aboriginal people and non-Aboriginal people in Canada with alarming rates of chronic diseases and socio-economic ills. While health indicators, such as mortality and morbidity, are important – it is also equally important to look at economic measures that determine health outcomes as the basic needs of clean water, adequate and available housing, sewage, food security, environmental contaminants and access to basic health care services. These are services that the majority of Canadians take for granted. For these reasons, a study of Aboriginal health must reflect a holistic approach that considers the importance of key health determinants. In addition to the determinants that affect Aboriginal health it is important that other key factors are also examined for their particularly harmful effects on Aboriginal people (especially on Aboriginal women).
    [Show full text]
  • Ken Moore: a National Story of an Indigenous Athlete
    Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 6-9-2020 10:00 AM Ken Moore: A National Story of an Indigenous Athlete James C. McCormick, The University of Western Ontario Supervisor: Forsyth, Janice, The University of Western Ontario A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the Master of Arts degree in Kinesiology © James C. McCormick 2020 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation McCormick, James C., "Ken Moore: A National Story of an Indigenous Athlete" (2020). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 7095. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/7095 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Abstract The shortage of Indigenous representation in sport history literature is unmistakable. Interest is growing to acknowledge stories of untold numbers of Indigenous athletes who remain inconspicuous in Canadian sport history. One way to accomplish this is to publicize the national stories of these athletes as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) recommends. This thesis, which focuses on the life of Ken Moore, presents his accomplishments as an athlete, but moreover, offers a version of his national story by shedding light on the challenges he faced as an Indigenous athlete. The paper includes an assessment of the responsibilities of the TRC, regarding its recommendations, and addresses the response to the imperatives by various organizations.
    [Show full text]