Harrison, Julia

Tłı̨chǫ, Co-management and the Bathurst Caribou Herd, 2009-2011

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Creator (cre): Lever, Jesse, Thesis advisor (ths): Harrison, Julia, Degree committee member (dgc): Legat, Allice, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

Since time immemorial caribou have been and remain central to Tłı̨chǫ life and culture. As early as the late 19th century, Canada began to implement wildlife management policies in the NWT in response to concern over the health and future of caribou populations. However, the 2005 Tłı̨chǫ Land Claims and Self-Government Agreement (Tłı̨chǫ Agreement) signed by the Tłı̨chǫ, the Government of the Northwest Territories and the Canadian Government outlines that Tłı̨chǫ will have a say in wildlife management on Tłı̨chǫ Lands. Co-management is the power-sharing model used in an effort to ensure that the Tłı̨chǫ voice is heard in these decisions. My thesis centres on the 2009-2011 co-management process and the resulting final management decisions regarding monitoring and management actions to promote the stabilization and recovery of the Bathurst Caribou herd. I focus my analysis on the Tłı̨chǫ perspective as expressed during this co-management process. I conclude that while Tłı̨chǫ perspectives were presented in the hearings and related processes, they were not well represented in the final management actions. This omission speaks to the wider issue of how aboriginal people are treated and understood in Canada.

Author Keywords: Canada, Caribou, Co-management, Northwest Territories, Tłı̨chǫ

2015

Ontario's Aboriginal Education Strategy: Successes and Areas for Improvement

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Creator (cre): Watson, Kaitlyn Suzanne, Thesis advisor (ths): Milloy, John, Degree committee member (dgc): Harrison, Julia, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

Since 2007, Aboriginal education initiatives in Ontario have been supported by the Aboriginal Education Strategy (Strategy) under provincial Liberal governments. Using a comparative analysis, this thesis seeks to identify how the Strategy supports and/or does not support components of critical pedagogy to promote transformational learning for all students in Ontario's publicly funded schools. A brief historical timeline of Aboriginal education in Canada and the current situation of educational attainment for Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples provides context for the thesis. Through an examination of policy documents and resources related to the Strategy, I identify both strengths and areas for improvement in the Strategy to meet expectations of critical pedagogy. Finally, I suggest recommendations to improve the Strategy in order to achieve its potential for the benefit of all students in Ontario's public schools.

Author Keywords: Aboriginal students, Critical pedagogy, Education, Ontario, Policy

2015

Unexpected Journeys: Unmasking Home While Abroad

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Creator (cre): Jordan, Bryan, Thesis advisor (ths): Harrison, Julia, Degree committee member (dgc): Wright, Robert, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

The last two decades have seen thousands of Canadian university graduates go to teach English in places such as China, South Korea, and Japan. In this thesis, drawing on Clandinin and Connelly's concept of narrative inquiry, I situate the stories I heard about the experiences of 15 teachers who taught English as a Second Language in South Korea between 2003 and 2012.

While my interviewees expressed intrinsically personal reasons for taking on such temporary professional employment, they also acknowledged that they felt somewhat forced to do so by an increasingly bleak job market at home. I position their decisions in the neoliberal employment context in Canada over the past two decades, highlighting the personal and socioeconomic factors that influenced them to take up such opportunities. Additionally, I examine how these experiences shifted their views of Canada and what it meant to be Canadian, both while they were away and upon their return home by revealing the contradictions between expectation and the lived realities of young Canadians. These contradictions unmask the deceptive nature of dominant narratives in Canadian society.

Author Keywords: Canadian Identity, Canadian Job Market, Narrative, Neoliberalism, Teaching Abroad

2014

From Toronto to Africville: Youth Performing History as Resistance

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Creator (cre): Dotto, Stephanie, Thesis advisor (ths): Harrison, Julia, Degree committee member (dgc): Kazubowski-Houston, Magdalena, Degree committee member (dgc): Litt, Paul, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

How can educators use drama to nurture an ability in their students to identify and challenge the discourses and practices that have historically perpetuated oppression and inequality within Canada — without miring them in those narratives of oppression? This dissertation discusses the work of De-Railed, a theatre group that worked with youth in Hamilton Rapids, a Toronto neighbourhood where a high percentage of residents experience racial discrimination and poverty, to create a play about the destruction of Africville, a historically Black community in Halifax, NS. Drawing from the methodologies of critical, performance, and imaginative ethnography; critical multiculturalism; theatre of the oppressed; and feminist critical pedagogy, this dissertation argues that while participants used the fictional and intersubjective nature of drama to express embodied and affective resistance to class- and race-based oppressions in Canada's past and present, the play-building process also reproduced certain unequal disciplinary structures that De-Railed was attempting to challenge. Emphasizing the importance of creating space for young people's expressions of negative affect and emotion, this dissertation considers both the potentialities and limitations of De-Railed's application of theatre of the oppressed methods in enabling participants to engage in affective expressions of resistance that may not have been permissible or available in other areas of their lives.

Author Keywords: Africville, feminist critical pedagogy, forum theatre, multiculturalism, performance ethnography, theatre of the oppressed

2019

My Canadian Story: Multiculturalism and Meaning-Making in Local Archives

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Creator (cre): Morrison, Caileigh, Thesis advisor (ths): Harrison, Julia, Degree committee member (dgc): Bhandar, Davina, Degree committee member (dgc): Eamon, Michael, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

Canada prides itself on being a multicultural nation, but the stories of people who are not "Canadian-Canadians," as defined by Eva Mackey, are underrepresented in archives. This project investigates three local archives and one online archive in Peterborough, Ontario, employing Rita Dhamoon's practice of "accounts of meaning-making" to understand how archives contribute to a community's understanding of itself and who belongs there. The findings indicate that the city's "Canadian-Canadians," who have portrayed them as transient and only temporarily settled in the city, frequently mediate the stories of "other" populations in Peterborough's archival records. This account of meaning-making provides an entry point for changing this understanding and making archives more welcoming and accessible in the city and beyond.

Author Keywords: Archives, Community, Identity, Immigration, Integration, Multiculturalism

2017

Imagining a National Research Centre: Decolonization, Commemoration, and Institutional Space

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Creator (cre): Hull, Megan Kathleen, Thesis advisor (ths): Harrison, Julia, Degree committee member (dgc): Eamon, Michael, Degree committee member (dgc): Milloy, John, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) convened in 2008 and focused on the impact of the residential school on Indigenous people in Canada. It was intended to initiate healing in Indigenous communities while contributing to new understandings between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Canadians. In 2015, the TRC's mandate must be completed, and its final task is creating a National Research Centre (NRC) at the University of Manitoba that will hold all of the documentation generated and collected throughout the TRC's tenure. In this thesis I examine many of the challenges the NRC faces, such as lack of funding, institutional oversight, and the enormity of balancing the needs of Indigenous survivors and their communities against building an accessible archive. At a broader level, questions remain about how successful the TRC has been in achieving reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Canadians, and how the NRC can work to fulfill this goal.

Author Keywords: archives, Canada, Indigenous, museums, residential schools, truth and reconciliation

2015