University of Toronto research ’collaboratory’ uses global lens to pursue community-based Indigenous research

Uahikea Maile, a noted Kanaka Maoli scholar, activist and practitioner from Hawa
Uahikea Maile, a noted Kanaka Maoli scholar, activist and practitioner from Hawai’i, recently established the Ziibiing Lab to study global Indigenous politics
Uahikea Maile, a noted Kanaka Maoli scholar, activist and practitioner from Hawai'i, recently established the Ziibiing Lab to study global Indigenous politics Indigenous Peoples all over the world have endured a common history. And, as  Uahikea Maile  notes, the experience of "colonial dispossession, territorial enclosure and the subsequent creation of nation states" is not unique to North America. Global political resistance against the effects of this shared history - which continues to this day - is at the heart of Maile's recently established research laboratory at the University of Toronto. Known as the Ziibiing Lab, the new Indigenous politics "collaboratory" takes its name from the Anishinaabemowin word for Taddle Creek, a stream that flowed through the land on which University of Toronto sits until the 19th century, when it was buried to create sewage infrastructure for the city. "The name is an important reference to that waterway, which still exists and resurfaces from time to time," says Maile, an assistant professor of Indigenous politics in the department of political science in the Faculty of Arts & Science and a noted Kanaka Maoli scholar, activist and practitioner from the Hawaiian island of O?ahu.
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