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Alumni Newsletter: Reflections from the Editors

Separated by an ocean but linked by technology, we are truly honoured to inaugurate the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Alumni Newsletter. It was with great excitement that we accepted this responsibility when the Foundation’s President Pascale Fournier presented us with this wonderful initiative.
emergence

Emergence Webinar: Environment

The COVID-19 pandemic has spurred an inflection point in thinking about environmental issues. Has our relationship with the environment changed during the pandemic and, if so, how will that influence our collective values? As many people return to the land in notable ways during this period of confinement, what lessons might Indigenous knowledge offer? What has the COVID-19 pandemic taught us about food security and sustainability? What lessons does the pandemic have for those on the front line of the fight against climate change?

McCall MacBain Match Challenge

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Spaces of Engaged Leadership

Spaces of Engaged Leadership: Environment

For many Indigenous societies, the expectation for traditional leaders has often been to uphold collective safety and well-being of the entire community. In times of shortage, when one individual or one family suffers, the whole community would choose to make sacrifices for the collective interest. While COVID-19 has exposed many of our society’s deepest vulnerabilities, it has also strengthened our ability to coordinate an historic collective response. A response that re-centres the care and well-being of others over that of individual gains.
What are the stories that will allow us to move forward together and create a world that values the care and well-being of others? What choices are we willing to make? Do we simply resume an unsustainable path that endangers the health and well-being not only of our most vulnerable populations but of the very systems that sustain us? Or can we transform our relationships to ourselves, each other and our planet?
Emergence episode 1

COVID-19’s impact on our relationship to the environment

On June 4, 2020, the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation held its first Emergence webinar, a series which explores how Canada and the world may emerge as we move beyond the COVID-19 crisis. With a focus on the environment, the first episode of Emergence drew more than a hundred attendees, including members of the Foundation community and members of the public.

Hosted by Robert Steiner, 2019 Foundation Mentor, the event featured Pierre Cloutier de Repentigny (2017 Scholar), Stéphanie Roy (2017 Scholar), Catriona Sandilands (2016 Fellow) and Neil Yeates (2018 Mentor) as panelists. Laure Waridel (2011 Scholar) and Phoebe Stephens (2018 Scholar) offered closing remarks.
emergence

Emergence webinar: COVID-19 & Human Rights

The response to the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed tensions between the need for bold public health measures and human rights such as freedom of movement and association, non-discrimination (with elder persons facing stricter restrictions to their freedom of movement), and privacy. While emergency measures always raise such tensions, this unprecedented situation is on a much broader, deeper scale. Have restrictions to human rights, in the context of COVID-19, been proportionate to the risks so far? Under the cover of public health, have vulnerable and marginalized people, including the elderly, refugees, migrants, homeless people, and religious and ethnic minority communities, been victimized or discriminated against? Has access to justice suffered? Digital tools that track and monitor the behaviour and movements of individuals, in order to help prevent the spread of the disease, also raise questions about whether they can be compatible with individuals’ right to privacy and with a free and democratic society more broadly.
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Spotlight: Jesse Thistle

Jesse Thistle is a road allowance Metis from Saskatchewan, a 2016 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholar, an assistant professor in Metis Studies at York University, and the best-selling author of the autobiographical book From The Ashes.
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Spotlight: Patti LaBoucane-Benson

The Honorable Patti LaBoucane-Benson is an alumni Scholar (2004) of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation. She is a Métis from Treaty 6 territory in Alberta and was appointed to the Senate of Canada in October 2018.
Spaces of Engaged Leadership

Spaces of Engaged Leadership: Human Rights

Spaces of Engaged Leadership: Leading Canada’s human rights response to the COVID-19 pandemic

Governments at all levels have moved with exceptional speed to slow the spread of COVID-19. While the COVID-19 outbreak is creating challenges for everyone in our society, it is particularly difficult for those living in vulnerable circumstances. People living in poverty, women and children fleeing domestic violence, people living in shelters, on the street or at risk of homelessness, people with disabilities or those with health conditions, people with mental health issues, older people living alone or in institutions, and people in correctional institutions must not be forgotten or ignored. The rise of racism since the start of the pandemic is also deeply concerning. This is both an issue of public safety and fundamental human rights. Equality, dignity and respect must remain at the centre of our advocacy efforts. Human Rights Commissions across Canada are finding new and different ways to collaborate, communicate and continue to do our important work. This engaged leadership session will provide an opportunity to discuss: What are the most pressing human rights issues arising from this health crisis? How should decision-makers respond to meet these challenges?  What advice can we offer about leading an organization during a time of crisis? 
John Borrows

Spotlight: John Borrows

John Borrows is a 2006 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Fellow. He is Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Law at the University of Victoria Law School and is an internationally recognized scholar in the field of Indigenous Legal Traditions and Aboriginal Rights. Professor Borrows is Anishinabe and a member of the Chippewas of the Nawash First Nation on Georgian Bay.