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As part of Treaties Recognition Week 2020 the Office of Indigenous Initiatives is encouraging the Western community to #KnowWhereYouLive. Historical Treaties between the British Crown and Indigenous Nations were crucial in the formation of Canada, and laid the foundation for relationships between Canada and Indigenous people today. Join Michael Coyle, Associate Professor at Western Law and Blackfoot writer and advocate Joy SpearChief-Morris, as they discuss the nuances and complexities of the historical treaty making process and the contemporary challenges by the state to Indigenous land claims and treaty rights today. Follow The Indigenous Student Centre on Facebook and Instagram. Please contact the Office of Indigenous Initiatives to use this video for purposes other than education. Speakers: Joy SpearChief-Morris Joy is an Indigenous Black Canadian athlete, academic, writer and advocate. She is a proud member of the Kainai Blood tribe and grew up in Lethbridge, Alberta. Joy has a Bachelor’s degree in History and First Nations Studies and a Master’s degree in Political Science specializing in Transitional Justice and Post-Conflict Reconstruction from Western University. Her research focused on Indigenous land claim settlements and reconciliation within Canada, looking particularly at land and relationship. Joy uses her knowledge as an Indigenous researcher along with her experiences as a Black Canadian to examine the intersections of race in colonial systems and political institutions. Joy also has her own blog where she shares her experiences as an Indigenous Black Canadian athlete as well her thoughts on political events. She recently sat on the Board of Directors for AthletesCAN and was a member of the Athletes Council for Athletics Canada. Joy currently works as the Student Opportunities Coordinator at the Indigenous Student Centre at Western University. As a 100m hurdler, Joy has achieved several accolades, both as a varsity athlete with the Western Mustangs Track and Field Team and previously with the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds, and as a member of Team Canada. Joy is a multi-time All American and All Canada, Canadian university national champion and multi-time Ontario University Athletics champion, multi-time national and OUA medalist, 2x OUA MVP, 3x Western Mustangs MVP, 3x Western Mustangs record holder, 2017 Western Mustangs’ female graduating athlete of the year, and 2x Canadian national finalist. Joy has been recognized for her accomplishments as an Indigenous athlete on and off the track with the 2017 Tom Longboat Award and the 2017 OUA and USports Student Athlete Community Service Awards. As a member of Team Canada, she is a 2014 North American Central American and Caribbean (NACAC) U23 silver medalist, and was recently 5th at the 2019 FISU World Universidad. Joy currently is training to qualify for the upcoming Tokyo Olympic Games. -------------------- Michael Coyle Professor Coyle joined the Faculty of Law in 2000. His primary research interests relate to Aboriginal rights and dispute resolution theory. In 2004 he was commissioned by the Ipperwash Inquiry to write its background research paper on Aboriginal land claims and treaty rights in Ontario. In the past four years he has been invited twice by the Senate Standing Committee on Aboriginal Peoples to present submissions to the Committee on land claims reform. In 2005, together with a group of academics from across the country, he received a five-year SSHRC grant to investigate the negotiation of Aboriginal governance. He has been the recipient of a UWO international research grant to investigate the role of power relations in indigenous dispute resolution, and in 2008 he was named the first MacCormick Fellow by the University of Edinburgh Law School. In 2011 Michael received a three-year SSHRC research grant to investigate the legal paradigms that might be applied to govern the modern implementation of historical treaties. In 2017 he received another SSHRC grant to synthesise the published literature on the revitalization of Indigenous legal orders in Canada. Professor Coyle has published many articles on the status of treaties and systemic issues relating to the negotiated settlement of Indigenous rights claims. Along with John Borrows, he is the co-editor of The Right Relationship: Reimagining the Implementation of Historical Treaties (U of T Press, 2017). Uploaded by: SMC