April 30, 2024
Education News Canada

DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY
Answering the Call: A look at how faculty, staff and students in Dal's Schulich School of Law are working together to respond to the Calls to Action of Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission

January 8, 2019

This article first appeared in the Fall 2018 edition of FOCUS, the newsletter of the Dalhousie Centre for Learning and Teaching. The full issue including additional articles on reconciliation and education from Dal faculty including Fred Wein and Margaret Robinson can be viewed online here.

When Naiomi Metallic joined the Schulich School of Law as a full-time faculty member in 2016, she arrived with a mantle and a mandate.

A member of the Listuguj Mi'gmaq First Nation, located on the Gaspé Coast of Quebec, and a 2005 alumna of the law school's Indigenous Blacks & Mi'kmaq (IB&M) Initiative, Prof. Metallic had been awarded Dalhousie's inaugural Chancellor's Chair in Aboriginal Law and Policy. Although the Chair is physically seated in the law school, it is intended to be interdisciplinary, which means Prof. Metallic collaborates not only with her Schulich School of Law colleagues, but also across other Dalhousie faculties and beyond.

The chair was created through the generous support of the Honourable A. Anne McLellan, who was appointed Chancellor of Dalhousie in May of 2015. It is intended to foster greater teaching and research on Aboriginal law and policy issues at the law school, as well as to promote interdisciplinary partnerships. "I have a great deal of room to do lots of wonderful things, and I'm truly excited and grateful for this opportunity," says Prof. Metallic.

At the ceremony that was held at the law school in October of 2016 to welcome Prof. Metallic, Schulich Law Dean Camille Cameron said this: "The contributions that Professor Metallic is making in the classroom, in our curriculum, and in building relationships between the law school and our Aboriginal communities in this region are exciting and exactly why the Chancellor's chair was established."

Shedding light on history

Prof. Metallic's plans for her five-year Chancellor's Chair term include implementing the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada's Call to Action 28, which calls upon Canadian law schools to teach the history and legacy of residential schools, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Treaties and Aboriginal rights, Indigenous law, and Aboriginal-Crown relations.

That first fall, Prof. Metallic organized Blanket Exercises for all first-year law students at Studley Gym, which were facilitated by the Mi'kmaw Native Friendship Centre. A Blanket Exercise is an experiential learning activity that teaches Canada's history of colonialism toward Indigenous peoples.

"It can be a very powerful experience," said Prof. Metallic at the time. "I wanted to add this to the first-year experience as a partial implementation of the TRC's Call to Action. I hope this is just the start. I've also joined the faculty committee examining other ways Schulich Law can be implementing the TRC Calls to Action 28."

It was, indeed, "just a start," and one that would lead to other important initiatives. In September of 2017, the Schulich School of Law launched Aboriginal and Indigenous Law in Context (AILC), a new mandatory two-credit course. It was delivered to all 170 first-year students in two intensive components, one at the beginning of the fall term and the other at the beginning of the winter term.

AILC 1, subtitled "The Aboriginal Historical and Continuing Context," was a two-and-a-half-day introduction to Indigenous culture and traditions in Nova Scotia. Students were provided with an initial set of related readings, attended a Blanket Exercise led by Prof. Metallic, and went on field trips to the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia to view Indigenous art, and to historical Indigenous sites such as Partridge Island and a former residential school. Several leaders from the Aboriginal community spoke on panels about the contemporary issues and challenges facing Mi'kmaq peoples.

Read more: New Aboriginal and Indigenous Law course fosters "eye-opening" experiential learning (Dal News, Nov. 2017)

AILC 2, "From Culture to Law," was delivered in one day and aimed to build on the cultural understandings established in AILC 1 to consider how law applies to, and is applied by, Indigenous peoples. In particular, this part of the course was designed to introduce students to the distinction between Indigenous law and Aboriginal law.

Over the summer Prof. Metallic and her faculty colleagues planned AILC for the 2018-19 academic year, making improvements based on the feedback they received from last year's evaluations and questionnaires. Enhancements included a day at the Mi'kmaw Native Friendship Centre, where students will be introduced to the issues the urban community faces, a lecture by Senator Murray Sinclair, and more dedicated time for AILC 2 in the winter term so students can get the most out of it.

Read the full story.

For more information

Dalhousie University
1459 Oxford Street
Halifax Nova Scotia
Canada B3H 4R2
www.dal.ca/


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