Call for Papers, Walking with Our Sisters

CALL FOR PAPERS

Walking with Our Sisters is seeking submissions for an edited collection tentatively entitled Keetsahnak, Our Sisters.

They are seeking scholarly and non-fiction essays that will contribute to the understanding of missing and murdered Indigenous women in Canada, the United States, and other colonial contexts worldwide.

Submission of a 300 word abstract is due January 24, 2014.

See full announcement here:  Call for Papers WWOS.

More information on the Walking with Our Sisters project including tour dates and pictures of the moccasin vamps here.

Update, Walking With Our Sisters First Exhibit Opening October 2

The Walking With Our Sisters Exhibit will open to the public on October 2, 2013 at the University of Alberta in Edmonton.

For anyone not familiar with this exhibit, it originated with Métis artist Christi Belcourt, who was looking for a way to raise awareness about the 600+ missing or murdered Indigenous women in Canada. Her original plan was to have 600 moccasin vamps (uppers) made to symbolically represent these women. She sent out requests to the community to see if anyone would be willing to donate vamps to this project. The response to her call has far exceeded her expectations. The final number of vamps that have been created and donated to the project is now 1,723. This overwhelming response is a testament to the impact violence against women has had on Indigenous communities, not only in Canada but in the United States and other places around the world.

A site has been created with information about the project, the schedule of exhibits, pictures of the donated vamps, media releases, and more. Link here.

Previous coverage here.

At this time, Canada has not yet positively responded to requests for an inquiry into the disappearances and unsolved murders of these women.

This project is about these women, paying respect to their lives and existence on this earth.  They are not forgotten.  They are sisters, mothers, daughters, cousins, aunties, grandmothers, friends and wives.  They have been cared for, they have been loved, and they are missing.

Man Camps and Predator Economics, Article and Upcoming Conference

Environmental threats are not the only threats associated with the oil pipeline that is expected to run through and near numerous Native communities in both the US and Canada. With large numbers of outsiders who have no accountability to the local communities coming along to work on that pipeline, it was only a matter of time before Native communities felt the impact.

It was just a matter of time before “man camps” would pose a threat to sacred native lands and bring sexual violence, prostitution, and increased drug traffic into the heartland of Native culture in North and South Dakota. As the proposed TransCanada Corporation oil pipeline that will run from Canada, North Dakota, eastern South Dakota, and Nebraska slouches towards reality, vulnerable populations of the Yankton, Rosebud and Cheyenne River reservations will bear the brunt of increased assaults and predation. This is not a theoretical threat. On a visit to the Bakken oil fields and Williston in North Dakota last summer, it was clear that man camps, temporary housing for oil pipeline workers, were bringing an influx of male population growth and not all of the men were nice guys.

Article here.

Announcement for upcoming conference: Aug 16 & 17 at the Fort Randall Casino to educate on these “man camps” and the impact they are having on Native families. Here.

Grant Opportunity, Exploratory Research on the Impact of the Growing Oil Industry in the Dakotas and Montana on Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), Office of Justice Programs (OJP), National Institute of Justice (NIJ) is seeking applications for funding to support an exploratory study on the domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking implications of the oil industry across communities in the Dakotas and Montana.

Research proposed may be focused at the Federal, State, local, and/or tribal levels.

Information on this opportunity here.

“Walking With Our Sisters” Commemorating Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in Canada and the U.S.

The “Walking With Our Sisters” project will be wrapping up and beginning its journey across Canada and possibly into the United States in just over a month (it is currently booked through the beginning of 2018), but there is still time to participate for anyone interested.

If you are not familiar with this project, here is a description from project founder Christi Belcourt:

“Walking With Our Sisters” A Commemorative Art Installation for the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women of Canada and the United States.

Although statistics in the U.S. are not available at present, In Canada, it is estimated that 600+ native women have gone missing or have been murdered in the last 20 years. Many have vanished without a trace with little to no concern paid by the media, the general public or politicians. This is a travesty of justice.

600+ moccasin tops are being created by hundreds of caring and concerned people to create one large collaborative art piece that will be installed for the public in various galleries and sites. They will be installed in a winding path of beaded vamps on cloth over a gallery floor. Viewers would need to remove their shoes to walk over the cloth and walk along the path.

 The exhibit is currently booked to tour across Canada and perhaps into the United States.

This project is about these women, paying respect to their lives and existence on this earth. They are not forgotten. They are sisters, mothers, daughters, cousins, grandmothers. They have been cared for, they have been loved, and they are missing.

A recording of traditional honour songs will also be created for the audio portion of the installation. A separate call to traditional singers anywhere in Turtle Island has gone out.

The due date for work is July 15, 2013. Mailed to Christi Belcourt, P.O. Box 5191, 133 Barber St., Espanola, ON, P5E 1A0. Send all work by a traceable package (Expedited, Registered, Express Post, etc.)

Donations towards the purchase of cloth, tobacco, shipping costs and other expenses directly related to the exhibit tour can be made by e-transfer to wwos@live.ca. Or directly to TD Canada Trust. Checks or money orders can be made out to Walking With Our Sisters and mailed.

All the work for the project is being done 100% by volunteers. No one is being paid for this work.

Link to the Facebook page for more information here.

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Report Alleges Lack of Emergency Contraception Violates TLOA and DOJ Protocols

An article from Mother Jones here.

The report is here.

Sex Trafficking of Native Women in Portand

Here’s a great article from Indian Country Today, mentioning Sarah Deer’s work.