Indigenous Women and the Law Conference 2022
Course Date: May 27, 2022
Total: 6h 36min
Course Date: May 27, 2022
Welcome and Land Acknowledgement (9:00 – 9:10)
Halie Kwanxwa'loga Bruce — Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack
Rosalie C.N. Yazzie — Nesika Law Corporation, Vice-Chair BC First Nations Justice Council, Westbank
OPENING PRAYER
Elder Maria Reed – Waabigekek Ikwe
Keynote: "Why Indigenous Women, Girls and Gender-diverse People Matter" (9:10 – 9:40)
The Honourable Marion R. Buller — Former Chief Commissioner, Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Inquiry, Anmore
Where We Have Been: Background and Context (9:40 – 10:25)
- overrepresentation: child apprehension and the criminal justice system
- barriers faced by Indigenous women and girls
- "Indigenizing" and perpetuating distinctions
- political landscapes
- women, marginalization, and activism
Jean Teillet — Pape Salter Teillet LLP, Vancouver
Bernie Williams (Gul-Giit-Jaad) — National Family and Survivors Circle; Advocate for MMIWG2S, Vancouver
Jessica D. Wood Si Sityaawks — Associate Deputy Minister, Declaration Act Secretariat, Ministry of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation, Province of BC, Victoria
BREAK (10:25 – 10:40)
Where We Are Now: Indigenous Women Living in the Intersections (10:40 – 11:25)
- interacting with the legal system
- exploring the intersection of gender, race, and the law, and how this impacts the lives of Indigenous women and girls
- legal categories: family, child welfare, human rights, criminal, employment, poverty, housing
- how intergenerational trauma, poverty, lack of resources and marginalization impact legal issues for Indigenous women and girls
- trauma-informed practice
- violence-informed practice
- gendered lenses
Patricia M. Barkaskas — Associate Professor of Teaching; Academic Director, Indigenous Legal Studies, Peter A. Allard School of Law, UBC, Vancouver
Karley Scott — Parole Board of Canada; Indigenous Women's Justice Plan, BC First Nations Justice Council; Governance Consultant, West Kelowna
BREAK (11:25 – 11:40)
Justice (11:40 – 12:40)
- what lawyers for Indigenous women and girls need to know in order to represent their clients competently
- punishment and reparation; the individual and the collective
- women, girls, and Gladue
- false confessions, wrongful convictions
- the system has failed—how to challenge what exists and bring change
Amanda Carling — Senior Policy Lawyer, Law Society of Ontario; BC First Nations Justice Council, Westbank
Lorna M. Fadden, PhD — Fadden Law, BC First Nations Justice Council, Penticton
Anisa Jennifer White, BCom, LLB, LLM Candidate — Gladue Report Writer and Lake Babine Nation Technical Justice Lead, Nitotemak Justice Advisory, Nanaimo
LUNCH BREAK (12:40 – 1:25)
Children, Youth, and Families (1:25 – 2:25)
- understanding of the context of Indigenous women's lives, including how to adopt a trauma-informed practice in order to advocate effectively for Indigenous women and girls
- why practitioners need a holistic practice approach: impacts on women children and family
- conflict resolution: when and why to access the available processes
- perspectives from parent's counsel and child/family mediator
- impact of ACES (Adverse Childhood Experiences)
- resistance, resiliency, and survival
- working from a place of compassion, surrounding the family
- intersecting with the child protection system
- how society fails Indigenous children, where the system can be different
Dawn Johnson — First Nations Women's Justice Strategy, BC First Nations Justice Council, Westbank
Laura A. Matthews — Matthews Mediation, Mission
Debbie Scarborough — Provincial Manager, Women & Child Protection, BC First Nations Justice Council, Westbank
Cheyenne Stonechild — Indigenous Youth Advocate, Burnaby
BREAK (2:25 – 2:40)
Moving Forward: Matriarchy and the Law (2:40 – 3:40)
- through Indigenous laws, legal orders, and institutions
- treaty and nation-building enables matrilineal resurgence
- the role of women in Indigenous law
- moving Indigenous laws forward: an academic perspective
- DRIPA and the future of UNDRIP in BC
Celeste A. Haldane, KC — Chief Commissioner, BC Treaty Commission, Vancouver
Andrea Hilland, KC — Policy Counsel, Law Society of BC, Vancouver
Annita McPhee, BSW, LLB — Director for the BC First Nations Justice Council, BCFNJC Lead on Child and Family Justice, and Health and Justice, Westbank
BREAK (3:40 – 3:55)
Action Roundtable (3:55 – 4:50)
- creating momentum for immediate change
- what lawyers for Indigenous women and girls need to know in order to represent their clients competently
Halie Kwanxwa'loga Bruce — Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack
Rosalie C.N. Yazzie — Nesika Law Corporation, Vice-Chair BC First Nations Justice Council, Westbank
Closing Prayer (4:50 – 5:00)
Elder Maria Reed – Waabigekek Ikwe
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