Towards Legal Recognition for Non-Human Relations, Webinar 2: Supernatural Beings and Sacred Places
Centre for the Law and the Environment Assistant
Oct 18, 2021
Monday, October 18, 2021, 5:00-6:00 PM PT
The Centre for Law & the Environment (CLE) at the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver, in collaboration with the UBC Sustainability Initiative and the Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights (CDER), is organizing a series of four workshops for individuals and organizations from Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities interested in enacting laws that respect and protect non-human beings like rivers, lakes, species and ecosystems. Attendees will hear directly from people who have taken part in campaigns to achieve legal recognition of non-human relations in Canada and abroad, about why and how they pursued such recognition, what opportunities and obstacles they encountered and what lessons they learned.
This second webinar will focus on supernatural beings and sacred places. Panelists will speak to Indigenous peoples' efforts to enact or revitalize laws that respect and protect the ancestors and supernatural beings embodied in sacred places in their territories.
Panelists
- Award-winning Tŝilhqot’in filmmaker, writer, and photographer Trevor Mack will speak about the legend of Tsʼilʔos (Mount Tatlow) and the Tŝilhqot’in nation's efforts to protect and revitalize their relationship with the ancestors who were transformed into mountains in the Chilcotin range of British Columbia.
- Māori legal scholar Jacinta Ruru of the University of Otago will speak about Tikanga Māori and recent treaty settlements that recognize that natural systems like rivers, mountains and forests have mauri (spiritual life force) and tapu (sacredness) and are descendants of atua (gods).
Moderator
- The webinar will be moderated by Meghan Robinson, PhD candidate in Interdisciplinary Studies, University of British Columbia, and Resident Fellow of the Centre for Law & the Environment.
MORE ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
- Centre for Law and the Environment