Introduction to Decolonization in the ENGO Sector
Thu 3 Oct 2024 1:00 PM - Thu 24 Oct 2024 3:00 PM EDT
Online, Zoom
Description
When: Thursdays, October 3, 10, 17, 24 (1-3:00 pm EST)
Where: Zoom Meeting (camera and audio enabled)
Cost: $100 for the series of 4 sessions
Please note, all participants will receive a confirmation email from TicketTailor with a link to join the meetings on Zoom. All registrants will be provided with a link to the recording and the presentation slides following each session.
The DEFNP workshop series will offer tailored programming designed to match ENGOs on their decolonial (un)learning journeys. In Fall 2024, members of the ENGO sector will be able to choose one of three workshop tracks: Introduction to Decolonization in the ENGO Sector, Advanced Decolonial Theory and Application, or For Indigenous Ears Only - A Space for Reflection and Action. Each series consists of four two-hour sessions.
Collectively, Decolonizing ENGO-First Nation Partnerships fosters:
- Awareness of settler colonialism and the ways it potentially harnesses civil society;Understanding about how Canadian law such as the Indian Act and the Income Tax Act has suppressed Indigenous governance systems;
- Awareness that Indigenous peoples have unique inherent political and legal systems, with which ENGOs may want to form partnerships;
- A better understanding about how to navigate partnerships with Indigenous communities that promote decolonial environmentalism;
- A stronger sense about how to identify and explain individual and organization social locations (i.e. positionalities) as part of ethical partnership development;
- Promoting the resurgence of Indigenous self-determination in the Canadian ENGO sector.
Introduction to Decolonization in the ENGO Sector
This workshop series is designed for first-time learners and those with limited comfort exploring the Session topics. Sessions will be lecture-style making limited space for group discussion. Breakout rooms will be used intermittently to encourage first-time learners to practice discussing topics and gain confident understanding of materials.
Session 1: Settler Colonialism 101
Introduce ENGO representatives to the fact that colonization is a structure and not an event. Identifies key ways that colonialism moves through individuals and organizations.
Session 2: Positionality
ENGO representatives learn how to articulate their social location within a settler colonial state, and in relation to potential Indigenous partners.
Session 3: Inherent Indigenous Governance 101
Introduce the fact that Indigenous nations have their own sources of political authority that they can (and do) draw on when addressing environmental issues. Examples provided.
Session 4: Building Better Relations
ENGO representatives will road test ways they can implement previous workshop key points to re-imagine partnerships with Indigenous nations.
Our Presenter:
Dr. Les Sabiston (Red River Métis) is from Aswahonanihk (Selkirk), Manitoba. Working at the intersections of political, legal, and medical anthropologies, as well as Indigenous Studies, Les’ work brings together critical social theories of colonialism, race, class, gender and sexuality with the political commitments of decolonization and aspirations of realizing alternative worlds informed by Indigenous futures. A guiding principle to his work has been to develop a more robust understanding of the ongoing process of encounter with Indigenous peoples in Canada, that is, how the state and its people interact with and understand themselves in relation to the original peoples of this land.