Pour mieux intégrer #antiracisme dans notre enseignement et notre recherche, pour s'informer en continu et faciliter les discussions/ To better integrate #antiracism in our research and teaching, to keep informing ourselves and to facilitate discussions.https://t.co/zH6FpWgJ1q
Big news here friends---We're a new peer-reviewed journal in early American studies, and we want your sources and scholarship. Check out the account's pinned tweet for our mission statement. Please circulate if you're interested!
We've pulled our scheduled tweets for the rest of today.
Instead, we ask that you please RT this.
Indian Residential Schools Survivors Society 1-800-721-0066
IRS National Crisis Line 1-866-925-4419
Distress Centre of Ottawa 613-238-3311
YSB Crisis Line 613-260-2360
Thank you.
En cette journée nationale des peuples autochtones ... Understanding and Finding our Way: Decolonizing Canadian Education https://t.co/ntn1RSVeQ9 via @YouTube
Une nouvelle plateforme numérique pour étudier et rechercher "La France aux Amériques." Ce projet qui combine les archives de plusieurs institutions et l'expertise de plusieurs chercheurs est vraiment à découvrir!
Discussion stimulante sur ce qu'est la France aux Amériques, d'un point de vue historique, entre Catherine Desbarats, François Furstenberg, Gilles Havard et Dominique Rogers, sur le site "La France aux Amériques" https://t.co/TXeUk5aVCY
If foundational, influential, groundbreaking, creative, work can be "seminal", can it also be, I don't know, ovarian? Or, like, not sexed?! #languagematters
RT this tweet by 11:59pm Friday (6/11/21) for a chance to win a copy of @ProfChrisAdams and @Tracy46990011's 𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘊𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯 𝘰𝘧 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘍𝘳𝘦𝘯𝘤𝘩 𝘙𝘰𝘺𝘢𝘭 𝘔𝘪𝘴𝘵𝘳𝘦𝘴𝘴 (@PSUPress, 2020). Check out their piece on their book for AoR below.
It's been 114 years since Indian Affairs Chief Medical Officer Dr. Peter Bryce reported and denounced the terrible children's death rates in residential schools (from 35% to 69% in some schools). He found that diseases (tuberculosis) were the main cause of these deaths. 1/9
We should always be appalled by news such as the #kamloops215, but they are no longer surprising. Simply a reminder that more barriers need to be brought down, more teaching and research need to happen, and reconciliation and reparation for Indigenous people are a necessity. 9/9