Shock swept across the country as many Canadians learned that the remains of an estimated 215 children were found at the site of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia.
For Indigenous people, the tragic discovery didn’t come as a surprise thousands of Indigenous children never came home from residential schools and their whereabouts remain unknown.
As a settler researcher who studies how we acknowledge the past and build ties between communities, what I find surprising is that many of us continue to be shocked.
Tip of the iceberg
We may never know the true figures.
“The violence of residential schools is like a slice across the spectrum of the Indigenous–settler relationship,” writes transitional justice scholar Rosemary Nagy. By taking children from their families, and in the physical and psychological abuses carried out there, residential schools were an integral aspect of broader policies that enacted violences and harms many of which
Author of the article: Star Staff
Publishing date: May 05, 2021 • 1 hour ago • 2 minute read Candles honour the women lost to trafficking and those who have survived their ordeal. Human trafficking, which is on the rise in Greater Sudbury, is a deeply traumatic experience that can haunt survivors for years. PHOTO BY MARY KATHERINE KEOWN/THE SUDBURY STAR
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Mary Katherine Keown’s searing portrait of human trafficking in Sudbury has earned her an Ontario Newspaper Award.
Keown, The Sudbury Star’s city hall reporter, won in the beat reporting, under 25K circulation, category.
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Nipissing University, community partners finish seven-year human trafficking study
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Reported by Greg Bowman
A seven-year study on human trafficking in northern Ontario shows the need to decriminalize sex work among other systemic changes.
Rosemary Nagy, an associate professor at North Bay’s Nipissing University and co-lead of the Northeastern Ontario Research Alliance on Human Trafficking (NORAHT), says one of the most significant findings from her team’s research was the impact anti-human trafficking campaigns have on victims.
“The biggest problem is that it depicts (sexually) trafficked women as passive victims awaiting rescue. It overlooks the really complicated ways in which people come to be trafficked. It overlooks the ways in which women navigate these situations with resiliency and resistance,” Nagy explains.