June 21, 2023 by
Department of Geography & Planning
To honour National Indigenous Peoples Day, Geography and Planning wishes to celebrate the work of several Indigenous and ally scholars (faculty and former students) from across the tri-campus. Here we offer direction to just a small sample of their critically important work:
- Daigle M. The spectacle of reconciliation: On (the) unsettling responsibilities to Indigenous peoples in the academy. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 2019;37(4):703-721.
- Dorries H, Harjo L. Beyond Safety: Refusing Colonial Violence Through Indigenous Feminist Planning. Journal of Planning Education and Research. 2020;40(2):210-219.
Professor Madeline Whetung (TMU) (former graduate student)
- Madeline Whetung; (En)gendering Shoreline Law: Nishnaabeg Relational Politics Along the Trent Severn Waterway. Global Environmental Politics 2019; 19 (3): 16–32.
- Latulippe, N., & Klenk, N. (2020). Making room and moving over: knowledge co-production, Indigenous knowledge sovereignty and the politics of global environmental change decision-making. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, 42, 7-14.
- Deborah Cowen (2020) Following the infrastructures of empire: notes on cities, settler colonialism, and method. Urban Geography, 41:4, 469-486.
Professor Sarah Nelson (U of Nebraska Omaha) (former graduate student) and Professor Kathi Wilson
- Nelson, S.E., and K. Wilson (2017) The mental health of Indigenous peoples in Canada: A critical review of research. Social Science & Medicine, Volume 176, Pages 93-112.