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» Go to news mainWeaving Together Law and Land
A new course createdby Schulich LawAssistant Professor Cheryl Simon is giving studentsan opportunity toexploreIndigenous law through hands-on engagement with Indigenous material culture.
Simon is anfrom Epekwitk (Prince Edward Island)who has practiced porcupine quillwork fornearly twodecades. Her course, LAWS 2385 – Indigenous Law via Material Culture, was intentionally designed to immerse students in Indigenous legal principles through lived,experiential learning.
“I wanted to showstudentshow our laws work in relation to land and the materials we harvest,” she explains. “And while it’s not the firsttimeI’ve incorporated quillwork in a course I’ve taught, it is the first time a course hascentredon teaching Indigenous law through an art form like porcupine quillwork.”
At the heart of the course is a focus on building meaningful relationships with the natural world. Students engagein this work through several interconnected activities that emphasizereflection, responsibility, and reciprocity.
As part of the course, eachof the 13studentsselecteda tree to visit weeklyand kept astewardship journal that documentedtheir observations, deepening theirunderstanding of both the course material and their relationship to the land.
With support fromin the Sir James Dunn Law Library–a Mi’kmaw womanfromGlooscap First Nation in Nova Scotia–students workedin small groups to research materials used in quillwork. Theysharedtheir findings with the class, including Mi’kmaw terms and pronunciations, as well as stories connected to the materials, contributing to a collective learning experience rooted in knowledge sharing.
The course culminatedin a final project in which each student designedand createda quillwork piece that reflects the legal principles they have studied. After learning foundational techniques, including quill cleaning and insertion using an eight-pointed star design, students developedtheir own original designs and presentedtheir work to the class.
“Indigenous law is meant to be embodied in an individual and have an effect on subsequent decisions and actions,” says Simon. “I hope the students take away a stronger connection to the land and a better understanding of how Indigenous legal principles function.I amextremely proud and excited for others to share in the quillwork that was created.”
An exhibit of the students’ work ison display in the atrium of the Weldon Law Buildinguntil Friday, May 8.
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