Concordia is working hard to enhance the university’s cultural climate for Indigenous learners, staff, faculty and the community at large — from the articulation of a territorial acknowledgement to the establishment of an Indigenous Directions digital hub.
Most recently, the university has announced two new senior appointments.
Heather Igloliorte has assumed the role of special advisor to the provost on Advancing Indigenous Knowledges. William Lindsay will become the new senior director of Indigenous Directions in January.
“The mandate for both of the new positions emerges from recommendations of the Indigenous Directions Leadership Group, which was established in 2016,” says Graham Carr, provost and vice-president, Academic.
“They speak to our obligation to respond to the calls to action to universities by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. But equally these positions, and the quality of thought and leadership that Heather and William will bring to them, speak to our ambition to differentiate Concordia as an institution that takes a next-generation approach to Indigenous directions in, and for, the future.”
Heather Igloliorte: ‘I believe in the path forward'
Heather Igloliorte is an Inuk scholar and independent curator who holds the Concordia University Research Chair in Indigenous Art History and Community Engagement.
Her teaching and research interests centre on Inuit and other Native North American visual and material culture, circumpolar art studies, performance and media art, the global exhibition of Indigenous arts and culture and issues of colonization, sovereignty, resistance and resurgence.
“As an academic, as well as a curator, I have been very privileged to get to do my work both within the university and in the public sphere,” Igloliorte says.
“Because of this, my scholarly and academic work has always focused on engaging with Indigenous peoples, nations, artists, students and youth, in order to build stronger connections between academia and community.”
Supporting Indigenous students, and involving them in meaningful research that benefits Indigenous peoples, is the most rewarding aspect of this, she adds.
“I am looking forward to working with the whole university to make Concordia a site of research excellence for work done by and with Indigenous peoples.”
Igloliorte will continue in her role as co-director of the Initiative for Indigenous Futures (IIF) research cluster in the Milieux Institute for Arts, Culture and Technology. Through Milieux, she works with collaborators and students to explore how Indigenous peoples are imagining the future of their families and communities.
Igloliorte is also the co-chair of the Winnipeg Art Gallery's Indigenous Advisory Circle. She sits on the Indigenous advisory committees of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences and the National Film Board of Canada. She also serves on the Board of Directors of the Inuit Art Foundation, Native American Art Studies Association and the Nunavut Film Development Corporation.
In her new role, which she assumed on October 1, Igloliorte is responsible for developing and leading a community-wide engagement process to identify, foreground and strategically advance Indigenous academic research and research–creation priorities for Concordia.
“I feel very humbled and grateful for this opportunity to work with our students, faculty and staff, in order to collectively imagine and create a new future for Indigenous research and academics on campus and beyond,” she says.
“I believe in the path forward that we are envisioning with the forthcoming Indigenous Directions Action Plan, and I am excited to collaborate with everyone here on the manifestation of that vision.”
Igloliorte will work with a number of key offices across the university including the Office of the Vice-President, Research and Graduate Studies; Innovation in Teaching and Learning; Planning and Positioning; Lifelong Learning; Partnerships and Experiential Learning; and the Concordia Library.
She will also collaborate with deans and other academic leaders to enable Concordia to become an innovator in Indigenous academic and research activities.