Learn about Straits Salish plant practices such as estuarine gardens, Indigenous ecosystem management, and their relationship with Indigenous legal orders, Aboriginal title, and UNDRIP.
Pamela Spalding is an ethnobotanist whose research examines dimensions of Indigenous people’s relationships with plants, ecosystems, resource stewardship, Indigenous feminism, Indigenous legal orders, and customary legal landscapes. She is a citizen of Métis Nation BC and an assistant professor in the Indigenous Studies Department at University of Victoria.
This event is hosted by Reconciling with Indigenous Peoples and the Land (RIPL).
Registration required (https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/AQ4OOEO3Tt6_GzmjBuAvjQ)
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Reconciling with Indigenous Peoples and the Land
We acknowledge that we are occupying unceded land of the Strait Salish, lək̓ʷəŋən speaking people who have been sustained in body, mind and spirit through their relationship with this land for thousands of years.