Indigenous london




















They included captives and diplomats, missionaries and shamans, poets and performers. Some, like the Powhatan noblewoman Pocahontas, are familiar; others, like an Odawa boy held as a prisoner of war, have almost been lost to history. In drawing together their stories and their diverse experiences with a changing urban culture, Thrush also illustrates how London learned to be a global, imperial city and how Indigenous people were central to that process.

Indigenous London is a major contribution to the growing scholarship of the Red Atlantic. In his exciting and always illuminating tour of the indigenous presence in the metropolis of the British Empire from the 16th to the 21st century, Thrush recovers the ways in which North American, New Zealand, and Australian native peoples sought to challenge settler colonialism.

This book is a must read for those interested in indigenous peoples, London and the British Empire. It demonstrates splendidly how the presence of these visitors stimulated a great deal of curiosity and speculation, as we would expect, but also forced Londoners to see the city through their eyes. Promote a culture within the London Police Services where all groups are safe and protected, and not targeted based on any of the enumerated terms in the Ontario Human Rights Code.

Ensure the London Police Services invests in and provides ongoing training to police officers and employees to better understand and protect the communities they serve. Encourage local media and community figures to promote inclusive messages and to address barriers and oppressions within London.

Implement a social media campaign modelled after MakeItAwkward. Encourage local businesses and organizations to share knowledge, resources, and information to address oppression, discrimination and ignorance. Promote events and opportunities for Londoners to collaborate, share, and access information. Encourage and facilitate dialogue between all levels of government and organizations around common goals of inclusion, particularly groups that stand to gain by supporting one another.

Recognize and celebrate Londoners, organizations and businesses that promote and undertake diversity, inclusion, and anti-oppression activities. Establish long-range plans to grow diversity activities, including grants and recognition programs. Ensure the City of London and other organizations understand and model best practices for inclusive engagement. Remove accessibility barriers to services, information and spaces Strategies: NOTE: The bolded strategies have been selected as the top strategies for Create awareness about the accessibility services available in the community, and encourage organizations to better promote the accessibility supports they offer.

Promote the local welcome and assessment centres for newcomers. Ensure that all current and future transportation options are reviewed by, and easily available and accessible to, seniors, persons with disabilities, and newcomers. Long before today, there have been the first peoples of Turtle Island who have been the stewards of this place. In particular, we acknowledge the traditional territory of the Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee, Attawandaron Neutral , and Wendat peoples.

This area was originally governed by the Three Fires Confederacy consisting of the Odawa, Pottawatomi, and the Ojibway. This territory is covered by the Upper Canada Treaties. We recognize and deeply appreciate their historic connection to this place. Awareness of the abuse and suffering endured by First Nations in residential schools in Canada has been heightened following the detection this spring of the remains of more than children buried on the grounds of a former residential school in Kamloops, B.

Pichette said six of his designs were being used without permission on the Facebook page and related t-shirt websites. She said that in some cases the designs have superficial changes.

Pichette said she could tell the work was stolen because her work had a signature embedded that she could see in the images used on the website selling the t-shirts. The links on the Facebook page lead to two different websites — winterbubbleprint.

CBC News called the number listed on the websites, but they only offered automated voicemail messages to verify orders with no way to speak directly with anyone. One of the web pages includes a web form for reporting intellectual property violations.

Pichette said she has completed it six times since July, but the company has never contacted her directly and the shirts with her stolen designs are still on sale. She said she was not an expert on intellectual property and did not have the time or skills to track down the people behind the companies.



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