Corps de l’article

Introduction: Contextualizing the Big Questions

I struggle to find life’s meaning. The book The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy says that the answer is 42. While I like this answer, this issue is not solely numeric or metaphysical. Ordinary questions about life’s physical trajectory can be difficult, such as “where did I come from?”, “why am I here?”, and “where am I going?”. For example, try answering these queries with reference to your own educational, employment, relational, political, social, or economic status. You will find many strands in your answers that complicate understanding since causation and trajectories are not linear. Furthermore, some things simply cannot be known.

At the same time, I should not overstate these challenges. These questions may yield obvious responses when considering specific issues. This is particularly true regarding education. For example, people go to university to prepare for future employment. In contemplating where they come from, a university student might say that they came from a secondary school. In discussing why they are here, they could talk about developing skills, discipline, and friendships while receiving academic credentials. Finally, successful students might report that they are going to use these skills to support themselves and their loved ones. Thus, it is possible to provide some tangible, tentative answers to life’s biggest questions if we consider more modest, proximate ends.

Nevertheless, these inquiries become more difficult when considering our interior views, particularly those related to timeframes beyond our lifetimes. Our emotional, psychological, intellectual, and spiritual lives are notoriously complex. Our internal ideas and feelings constantly shift. Furthermore, approaches to life’s so-called meaning are influenced by our class, race, gender, culture, religion, age, sexual orientation, and other varied contexts. Our perspectives are also intergenerational. This gives rise to many perspectives on where, why, and how questions.

This essay examines how university students change understandings of where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going in relation to Indigenous and Canadian law. Part I examines more general student approaches to education, including the intrinsic and instrumental motivations of students and how those students influence their professors’ teaching and writing. Part II highlights Indigenous legal education initiatives at the University of British Columbia, Osgoode Hall Law School at York University, the University of Toronto, and the University of Victoria. This second Part shows that law students are a significant force in persuading law schools to add Indigenous courses, moot courts, clinical experiences, internships, land-based events, a scholarly journal, and teaching in legal traditions to the mix of learning opportunities in these institutions. Part III discusses the importance of graduate students in asking where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going in legal, political, social, and economic terms. Finally, Part IV discusses the development of the joint Indigenous law and common law degree (JID/JD) program at the University of Victoria Law School as a dimension of student action in changing how we teach and practice law in Canada.

Ultimately, this essay concludes by suggesting that life’s meaning, in part, revolves around our capacities for growth. This growth is enhanced when students compare, contrast, consider, criticize, concur, and reject other people’s views, including those of Canada’s legislatures and courts, as well as their own communities’, professors’, and colleagues’ views. In following these paths, this essay concludes that it is not easy to find life’s meaning, in either proximate or absolute terms. Nevertheless, striving to understand life’s purposes, while accepting the task’s possible futility, creates constructive tensions that appropriately challenge self-assured stories about where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going as individuals and societies.

I. University Students and Proximate Life Purposes

Despite certain limits[1] students ask big questions and reflect on life’s purposes in universities. For example, university students see their own lives in broader contexts when they learn more about themselves, their neighbours, and people they will never meet. They pursue post-secondary education to grapple with perspectives very different from their own. In the process, students seek to better understand their communities’ histories and contemporary circumstances, and to contribute to the larger world.

Other students study for reasons that are not obvious at the outset, particularly when they acknowledge that they do not really know themselves. These students go to school to learn who they may be or become. In other words, they attend university for intrinsic reasons. They are prepared to be surprised about their own past, present, and future. From these vantage points, asking students where they came from, why they are here, and where they are going may be precisely what they hope to forge and learn in university.

Many of these same students use their education to challenge existing conditions and fight injustice. They are motivated to learn by their acceptance, alteration, transformation, or rejection of their prior views. I regularly encounter university students who implicitly tackle larger pressing questions related to where they came from, why they are here, and where they are going.

Yet other university students are more cautious in their approaches to university life. Their interests are more instrumental. They go to school to confirm their own ideas, identities, feelings, and frameworks. They are no different than most of us in this regard. We all struggle with complexity. This is why humans use mental shortcuts, called heuristics, in identifying and assessing information. This favours the status quo and introduces bias into our decision-making[2] Heuristics often provide shortcuts for taking action because we do not have the time, information, or abilities to explore all the varied implications of the information that we receive[3] Life’s ambiguities can be overwhelming and thus, when learning, we necessarily use rough estimates about how to proceed when presented with new ideas. This happens in university even as we try to widen our horizons or opportunities. Default positions, which affirm our views, help us take action without having to analyze every new detail that we encounter. Thus, heuristics can serve us well.

Unfortunately, danger arises when our biases hide our preconceptions, predilections, and predispositions, particularly from ourselves. This can be a challenge for university professors and students if our identity-based frameworks prevent us from facing facts or respecting others’ opinions. Thus, universities function best when they bring our own biases to our attention. The following examples demonstrate students’ humility and resolve to both respect and challenge received wisdom. These examples show why students are at the heart of any university’s mission because of how they reflect upon preconceived ideas and forge new pathways.

Speaking personally, I have been impressed with how university students, as a group, broaden our horizons and expand our views. I see more of how other people frame life’s purposes because of their participation in class, office visits, faculty governance, and research output. My most important experiences in universities are with students. This is not to diminish professors’ contributions. I merely acknowledge an obvious point: professors are not the fount of all knowledge; they are not necessarily the most innovative part of our post-secondary education systems. Students ask questions that often propel a professor’s own work. Students’ research advances knowledge in key ways as professors learn from, with, and alongside students as we teach, mentor, supervise, and read their work. As I said, they have been some of my greatest teachers. I absorb as much from them as any other source.

One reason that student engagement can be enriching is because student experiences can be more varied when compared to those of their professors. Students therefore bring unexpected perspectives to their interactions. They teach faculty and one another in direct and vicarious ways. Some students read widely and pass along what they have learned in class, conversations, and essays. Moreover, life is not static. Through thirty years of teaching, I have noticed that each generation raises different concerns. Students ask tough questions about things that I rarely or unfairly consider. Since their collective life experience is broader than my own, I would be foolish not to learn from them. Not only do they answer questions, but they also question answers that I assumed were not subject to further interrogation[4] When this happens, I learn more about life’s meaning.

There are also times when students teach me what not to do. Like all people, they can be foolish. Their missteps and oversights give me pause. They also make mistakes; they get things wrong and require correction. Like their professors, they make errors. How we convey and respond to subpar grades, teaching evaluations, and peer review can be done well or poorly. Furthermore, a lapse in judgement can reveal assumptions that would otherwise remain hidden.

Furthermore, every decade, one or two students unfortunately cause great harm to their colleagues and our school. Whether through plagiarism, passive acquiescence, misdirected activism, intimidation, harassment, or obliviousness, a few students have torn us apart in detrimental ways. I have seen professors do the same thing. These are tough moments. We do all that we can to prevent them. Yet even these terrible experiences also generate lessons; they are teachable moments about life’s purposes.

Fortunately, ninety-nine per cent of my interactions with students have been enriching. Their essential role requires continual highlighting: universities would be significantly diminished if they were solely research labs or partisan think-tanks. If students did not keep posing big questions, our inquiries would lose valuable context and content. In this way, they help us deepen searches for life’s meaning.

II. Law Students and Indigenous Legal Education Initiatives

While individual agency is key in considering life’s big questions, we must also pose our queries collectively. We need one another’s insights. We live in communities that require one another’s care and contrariness. We are warmed by fires that we have not built and we drink from wells that we have not dug. We are entangled[5] What we do has an impact on those around us. Our actions have consequences for people whom we will never know. Individuals are not isolated atoms living in a social vacuum. For this reason, in addition to strongly encouraging individual freedom to question in unique ways, we must also approach life’s purposes as groups.

In this light, students are also key to universities because they do more than educate us as individuals. They change how we collectively organize and communicate knowledge. In this way, they are an important part of how universities govern themselves. Students bring systemic concerns to the fore. They have an enormous impact on how we structure learning, including what we teach and write. This is particularly the case with Indigenous issues.

For example, students have greatly influenced universities’ work in Indigenous law through the years. While they have not uncovered where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going from metaphysical standpoints, they have substantially reframed approaches to these questions from historical, political, economic, ecological, and social perspectives. Their demand for relevant curricula, support, and community-based learning has changed how and what we learn. Societally, while many problems remain, many universities now more clearly acknowledge that we come from a colonial past, and they must grapple with its ongoing effects to enhance our future health and well-being. These are significant where, why, and what-for contributions that enhance searches for life’s meaning.

To illustrate, I will provide a few examples of how I have seen students shape the way in which we collectively ask questions in law schools, drawn from my own experience.

In 1992, when I taught at the University of British Columbia (UBC) Law School, I was the First Nations Legal Studies Director[6] I chaired a First Nations Legal Studies Committee that had a significant number of student representatives who later became leaders in their field[7] The students were not satisfied with how the school prepared them for practice or how we reflected their concerns. As a result, they requested more classes in both Indigenous peoples’ own law and Canadian law as it relates to Indigenous peoples. Their views resulted in an increase in courses from two to seven and led to more people being hired to teach in the field.

Furthermore, UBC students wanted an Indigenous legal clinic, a national Indigenous moot court, and more opportunities to associate with lawyers who represented Indigenous people. Their study, advocacy, and support helped form the Indigenous legal clinic in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside[8] Their efforts at UBC and elsewhere led to the creation of a nation-wide Kawaskimhon Moot experience that continues to be part of national law school curricula over twenty-five years later[9] Métis student Jean Teillet at the University of Toronto Law School was a key individual in generating this development[10] While getting the profession to support Indigenous students has been more challenging, student calls for the profession’s backing remains an important goal at all law schools[11]

When I later taught at Osgoode Hall Law School at York University, Indigenous student leadership also animated my experience. They helped form “why we were there,” which informed “where they would go.” As noted, Indigenous communities and students were not well served by law schools’ conventional curricular offerings. Anishinaabe law student Susan Hare was instrumental in the establishment of the Indigenous Lands, Resources & Governments Intensive Law Program at Osgoode, where I was hired to teach in 1994. Ms. Hare worked with faculty members to design its major features and fundraised to support its operation. As the course began, and through the years, it has remained relevant as it continues to be responsive to student feedback.

The Osgoode Intensive Program has now been running for over twenty-five years and has enrolled over 450 students from many law schools[12] These students spend an entire semester working with Indigenous communities around the world, in places that the students often have an active role in choosing. They study in an academically rigorous placement-based course that contains their entire credit load for the term. A series of intensive seminars early in the semester precedes seven-week field placements with Indigenous organizations, environmental organizations, Indian reserves, law firms, or government departments working on applied legal issues. Students’ written work has made a significant difference to these groups. Their research papers ensure that they stand back and critically assess their experiences in order to ask bigger where, why, and what-for questions.

Indigenous student leadership was also key to broadening the legal academy’s horizons when I taught at the University of Toronto Law School. Planning began in the late 1990s, and their efforts eventually led to the establishment of the Indigenous Law Journal (ILJ) in 2002. Douglas Sanderso[13] and Karen Abbot[14] were key figures in its development. The ILJ is a student-run legal journal “dedicated to developing dialogue and scholarship in the field of Indigenous legal issues both in Canada and internationally. The journal publishes articles, notes, case comments, and reviews grounded in all areas of study pertaining to both the laws of indigenous peoples and the law as it affects indigenous peoples.[15] The ILJ’s publications throughout the past two decades have demonstrated how students make a significant contribution to scholarship during their university studies, and how they have invited others to do the same. As with other initiatives described herein, the ILJ encourages big questions, which often go to the heart of where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going in Indigenous and other legal relationships.

During my time at the University of Toronto, law students also assisted in developing the June Callwood Program in Aboriginal Law when a donor approached me seeking to support Indigenous law students. After conversations with Dean Ron Daniels and the Indigenous Law Students’ Association, the Callwood Program was initiated and now provides up to two summer fellowships of up to $10,000 for law students to work with community organizations on Indigenous legal issues[16]

In 2001, I was hired as the Law Foundation Professor in Indigenous Justice and Governance at the University of Victoria (UVic) Law School. In taking this position, I also saw how law students helped propel Indigenous law scholarship and program development. In so doing, they further changed how we approached “why we are here” and “where are we going” questions. For example, as Nunavut became a new territory, there was a need to provide legal education in the north because there was only one Inuit lawyer in the area when the territory was created. UVic Law School co-op student Kelly Gallagher-McKay (who, a decade later, became a university professo[17]) worked with Inuit leaders, other leaders, and organizations in Iqaluit to develop a proposal to host legal education in the north. Through her efforts, as well as other student and community efforts, UVic ran the Akitsiraq Law School from 2001 to 2005 in partnership with the Akitsiraq Law Society and Arctic College in Iqaluit, Nunavut[18] The program operated in the north on a cohort model with students proceeding together through a four-year law degree[19] Most of the students were Inuit and they taught me much about Inuit law along the way. Inuit law has metaphysical and practical orientations that expanded my understanding of life’s meaning once again.

In particular, the students took an Inuit language and law course with Inuit Elder-in-Residence Lucien Ukaliannuk, which caused them to bring questions about Indigenous law more generally to my classes on contracts (voluntary obligations), remedies, and Indigenous Peoples and Canadian Law[20] In addition, the students asked questions about how to live well, how to become a balanced legal professional, and how to fulfil their responsibilities to past and future generations. They wanted to be responsively responsible to Inuit lifeways in how they would, one day, practice law. They were very proactive learners. The students’ questions helped me see the place of Inuit law in Nunavut and their views reinforced the importance of Indigenous law more generally, as necessary to understanding law in Canada.

Law students from the south learned lessons about Indigenous law’s importance too. Akitsiraq students met other law students in our Victoria-based UVic JD program in the Akitsiraq cohort’s final year[21] Inuit students enrolled in our conventional JD courses on the southern edge of Vancouver Island to complete their degree. In Victoria, they introduced their perspectives on law to faculty and other law students.

The broader community outside the law school also gained a heightened appreciation for Indigenous law when Inuit law students and elders met with Kwakwaka’wakw elders and law keepers in the Mungo Martin Big House next to Victoria’s inner harbour. Around a blazing fire, surrounded by clan and crest carvings, Inuit and Kwakwaka’wakw people shared their laws. They explained how they regulated resource use, land allocation, family matters, and other contemporary issues. They talked about larger philosophical questions that placed us in a broader stream of time. We talked about the stars, winds, ice, rain, elements, and animals and the ways that they all give rise to obligations. We discussed their millennial-long history, colonialism’s recent impacts, and their future hopes for greater self-determination. This was a transsystemic engagement between legal systems through story, song, dance, and discussion. It revealed innovative approaches to where, why, and what-for questions. It was not long before a proposal was drafted for a joint Indigenous law and common law degree for UVic.

The idea of a joint Indigenous law and common law degree was first discussed in the early 1990s. Professors Trish Monture[22] Sakej Henderson[23] my Ph.D. student Harold Cardinal[24] and I generated the idea. We were teaching in the Summer Program in Native Legal Studies at the Native Law Centre in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, and the students wanted more Indigenous law content[25] In response, our idea was to teach Indigenous peoples’ own legal orders in law school settings, including creating a comprehensive program hosted by the First Nations University (FNU) in Regina. When the FNU Law School idea failed to transpire, I became fixated on the idea of an Indigenous Law Degree. From this experience, and building on my graduate work[26] my scholarship dove more deeply into Indigenous peoples’ own law and its relationship with broader Canadian law[27] Thus, in 2005, as Akitsiraq was winding down, I composed a thirty-page document proposing a joint Indigenous law and common law degree at the UVic Law School[28] With the encouragement of our then-Law Dean Andrew Petter[29] Canada Research Chair Jeremy Webber[30] and Jim Tully[31] the proposal outlined the broader contours and specific details of a joint Indigenous law and common law degree.

Law students at UVic and elsewhere supported the necessity of seeing Indigenous law as an ongoing force in Canada. UVic students, led by Doug White, formed an Indigenous Law Club that provided excellent feedback on the proposal[32] They generated further student and Indigenous community interest and their enthusiasm led to the creation of an initiative that piloted different aspects of the future degree. Along the way, UVic offered summer programs in Indigenous law, specialized Indigenous law methods courses, and land-based experiences with communities, experiences in which students eagerly partook. Professor Val Napoleon was hired and planning for the joint Indigenous law and common law degree kicked into high gear[33] Among other activities, Professor Napoleon created an Indigenous Law Research Unit to work with communities to help them revitalize their laws as they invited us into their work. Some of the initiatives were national, and students from across the country enrolled in them, which further enhanced the field[34] Student class participation and research papers revealed other dimensions of the field and these students took their experiences at UVic back to their law schools and communities.

This soon led the law school to work more closely with Indigenous communities. Before long, we were invited to Osgoode Hall Law School[35] McGill Law School[36] Western University Law School[37] Windsor Law School[38] the University of Toronto Law School[39] and others to offer land-based Indigenous law courses and orientations for even more students[40] When you are out on the land, forests, fields, shorelines, and in the homes of Indigenous communities, questions about where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going inevitably arise. In our time together, elders, wisdom-keepers, storytellers, Chiefs, band councillors, and First Nations members both prompt and respond to these questions. The discussions are wide-ranging. Fortunately, when students interact with one another, Indigenous communities, and the natural world in these settings, you cannot contain the scope of conversation within conventional university bounds.

III. Graduate Students and Indigenous Law

As Indigenous legal education efforts grew alongside more frequent attentiveness to life’s broader questions, Indigenous law initiatives arose at many schools. This led to a number of Indigenous and other students enrolling at UVic Law School with the goal of studying Indigenous Law in their graduate degree programs. They wanted to contribute to the development of the field in university and community settings. Many of these graduate students are now professors and teachers at other schools and some are colleagues at UVic, teaching in the school’s Indigenous law (JID) and common law (JD) joint degree. A summary of their research in the next paragraph demonstrates their work’s ground-breaking reach. From their titles, you can also see that many asked questions that reframe where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going, at least legally speaking. Some of their work even poses such questions on a much wider scale and in an exceptionally deep way.

The research on Indigenous peoples’ law and its more general relationship with Canadian law is burgeoning. It now influences countless law students, and others, as these former graduate students teach and continue to write through their professional careers. As noted, in the last ten years, the following authors have researched Indigenous law and its interactions with Canadian law: Ryan Beaton[41] Kinwa Bluesky[42] Andrée Boisselle[43] Keith Cherry[44] Robert Clifford[45] Aimée Craft[46] Alan Hanna[47] Carwyn Jones[48] Dawnis Kennedy[49] Darcy Lindberg[50] Danika Littlechild[51] Johnny Mack[52] Aaron Mills[53] Sarah Morales[54] Val Napoleon[55] Joshua Nichols[56] Nicole O’Byrne[57] Jacinta Ruru[58] Nancy Sandy[59] Jennifer Sankey[60] and Kerry Sloan[61]

As you see, graduate students are making a significant difference in examining the resurgence of Indigenous law and its relationship to the Canadian state. Along the way, they reframe some of society’s biggest questions. Reading their work reveals the unsettling nature of the state’s framing of society’s foundation, organization, and goals. They discuss how the assumptions built into Canadian legislation, case law, and governance accentuate acquisitiveness in ways that conceal Indigenous views of the state’s origin, operation, and future fate.

In noting this work, I should also highlight that there are many other graduate students who write in this field. In the prior paragraph, I only referenced UVic graduate students who subsequently taught in university settings. The individuals above are all university professors. Other former UVic graduate students writing in this field work in key positions in governments, law firms, courts, Indigenous communities, and non-governmental organizations. Furthermore, while UVic Law School has been fortunate to host a large number of students working with Indigenous legal issues, other law schools have also experienced a significant expansion of people working in this field[62] This activity demonstrates that students are a leading force in assisting Indigenous communities in the communication and revitalization of Indigenous peoples’ own laws. In the process, they help our country more clearly see where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going in relation to these fundamental relationships.

IV. Colonialism and the Resurgence of Indigenous Law: The JID/JD Dual Degree

Despite the positive changes outlined in this chapter, there are important questions that are less likely to receive consideration from other Canadian legal institutions. Courts and legislatures have consistently avoided big questions such as how Canada can claim legitimate governance over Indigenous peoples[63]

For example, the Crown’s claim to overarching governance rests on assumptions of Indigenous political, legal, and social inferiority when the parties encountered each other[64] Crown claims arise solely from unilateral Crown assertions without any meaningful participation or engagement from Indigenous peoples who were “here first.[65] The Crown’s assertions are a weak foundation from which to ask “where did we come from” questions[66] One-sided, racist suppositions make it difficult for the Crown to admit that its claims of where it came from as a government did not adequately deal with prior Indigenous land relationships and social orders.

Moreover, even if we could somehow legitimate the unjust sources of government power relative to Indigenous peoples, the next question is equally challenging: How can Canada justify governing Indigenous peoples when the contemporary effects on Indigenous peoples are disastrous? Indigenous peoples’ life expectancy is ten to fifteen years shorter than that of other people in Canada[67] infant mortality rates are two to four times higher[68] employment on reserve is over twenty-five per cent below the national rate[69] median income is approximately fifty per cent less than non-Indigenous income[70] approximately fifty-seven per cent of First Nations young adults on reserve have completed high school compared to 89.2 per cent of non-Indigenous young adults off-reserve[71] and over forty per cent of reserve homes require major repairs with problems in plumbing, water access, and quality, as well as exposure to allergens and mold[72] Furthermore, Canada unequally and chronically underfunds First Nations education, child-care, and social services when compared with the general population[73]

The undermining of Indigenous governance in Canada, and replacing it with federal and provincial so-called jurisdiction, is not justifiable in light of Canada and the provinces’ prejudice, ineffectiveness, and ongoing harm. Other questions follow, such as how the Crown can justify claiming underlying title to land throughout Canada, or how it can claim exclusive use and possession in places where Indigenous traditional owners have not transferred such rights to them through treaties, agreements, or other means[74]

Another question reasonably flows from these inquiries: How do Canadian courts justify their role in adjudicating Indigenous and Crown disputes when they are creatures of the state with which Indigenous peoples are in conflict[75] Courts have not meaningfully asked where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going when relating to Indigenous peoples. This is to say that courts do not clearly acknowledge their colonial roots, their ongoing colonial supervision, or their suppression of meaningful Indigenous self-determination.

The situation could have been different. In 1982, existing Aboriginal and treaty rights were recognized and affirmed in section 35(1) of Canada’s Constitution Act, 1982[76] This was a missed opportunity to place Indigenous governance on solid constitutional grounds. Furthermore, Aboriginal title recognition has been slow to develop and Crown title over Indigenous land has not been justified either[77] This is despite over fifty cases interpreting section 35(1) decided by the Supreme Court of Canada. These cases are in addition to the thousands of cases heard in lower-level bodies across the land. While section 35(1) has generated noticeable changes, such as requiring the Crown to justify its actions when breaching Aboriginal and treaty rights[78] Indigenous peoples have been unable to have their most important powers clearly endorsed, such as Indigenous governance and law[79] Moreover, the courts have not adequately justified where their authority comes from, why they are here, or where they are going (except to say that they are here to sta[80]), relative to Indigenous peoples throughout the land.

Fortunately, Canadian courts and legislatures do not hold all of the power when considering the revitalization of Indigenous peoples’ law. Indigenous peoples deepen their own legal traditions in ways that decentre the state[81] They ask and create their own answers about life’s purposes[82] In the process, Indigenous peoples have revitalized their laws by bolstering potlatch and feast traditions on the west coast[83] expanding Guardian Watchperson programs throughout the country[84] strengthening their internal constitutional relationships from coast to coast[85] and using custom and declarations to protect their communities through a worldwide pandemic[86]

Universities generally, and law schools more particularly, engage with Indigenous communities to ask larger questions. As noted in the last section, this prompts students to produce innovative scholarship aimed at understanding how to teach Indigenous legal orders[87]

Furthermore, Canada’s Indian Residential School Truth and Reconciliation Commission also prompted law schools to engage more fully with Indigenous law and Canadian law dealing with Aboriginal peoples[88] The twenty-eighth Call to Action from the Commission stated:

We call upon law schools in Canada to require all law students to take a course in Aboriginal people and the law, which includes the history and legacy of residential schools, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Treaties and Aboriginal rights, Indigenous law, and Aboriginal-Crown relations. This will require skills-based training in intercultural competency, conflict resolution, human rights, and anti-racism[89]

At UVic Law School, these varied efforts paved the way for the launch of the common law (JD) and Indigenous law degree (JID), launched in 2018. The JID/JD is a transsystemic law degree that teaches Indigenous law alongside the common law. This four-year program compares and contrasts legal traditions to understand where the gaps, inconsistencies, and taken-for-granted assumptions are present in conventional law school teaching and practice. In the first year, students take five classes. There is a course in constitutionalism that teaches Anishinaabe chi-naaknigewin alongside Canadian federalism, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms[90] and Aboriginal and treaty rights. This is the course that I convene[91] There are written constitutions developing throughout Anishinaabe territory in Ontario[92] and we also discuss Anishinaabe constitutions, legislation, and tribal court decisions from Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan, since Anishinaabe law is also practiced in these jurisdictions[93] Other first year courses engage Cree legal traditions and Canadian criminal law, Gitksan law related to land and Canadian property law, legal research and writing, and law, legislation, and policy. In the second year, students learn Tsilqhot’in laws of voluntary obligations, which is taught transsystemically with contract law. There is a course in Hulqumi’mum (Salish) law of involuntary obligations, which also conveys Canadian tort law principles throughout second year. Students take other classes from the general curriculum in the remainder of their second year. In upper years, they take transsystemic business associations, transsystemic administrative law, and electives from the general curriculum. In addition, they must take two community-based courses for an entire semester, immersing them in a particular legal tradition. Field courses exist in Hulqumi’num law, Cree law, Kwakwakawak law, and W̱SÁNEĆ law.

There are approximately twenty-five students admitted each year and they come from all walks of life. A slight majority of students are Indigenous, but the program is designed to appeal to students from many different backgrounds. It is an honour to teach all of them.

In the program’s first year, students faced high expectations. They studied under the media’s glare. They were the first students in the world enrolled in a professional degree combining the study of Indigenous law and the common law. They also experienced the culmination of many years of piloted courses, projects, scholarships, and planning as their first year unfolded. There were more than a few uneasy moments as everyone worked through the newness of the program. Fortunately, the students were brilliant. They have written outstanding papers, made significant contributions to Indigenous communities through their summer employment and course work, and are now graduating to fill coveted positions in communities, government, law firms, and other places where Indigenous law interacts with contemporary affairs. As you can see, these students have a strong proximate sense of where they came from, why they are at UVic, and where they are going in the short term.

The second-year cohort was equally as strong in their preparation and participation. The students also faced unique challenges. In the middle of their first year, nation-wide protests broke out against a Coastal GasLink pipeline and in support of Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs[94] One of the epicentres of protest was on the steps of the British Columbia legislature in Victoria, B.C[95] Many students spent weeks camped out on the legislative lawn to advance Indigenous law as a vehicle for addressing energy conflicts in the province and beyond[96] There were also healthy differences of opinion among the student group. These students definitely knew where they came from before entering UVic, and why they were studying at the school. However, the protests gave rise to further questions concerning where they might go with their education, given the conflict regarding Indigenous laws with Canadian law more generally.

The third year of the Program occurred during a worldwide lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As I prepared my course, I was concerned that we would not effectively learn Anishinaabe and Canadian constitutionalism because we could not meet face-to-face. I normally take my students outside when learning Anishinaabe law. We can draw teachings, processes, and principles from the natural world and I was worried that virtual learning would interfere with this process. When we are outside together, we might see a robin (pitchii) which would prompt discussion about freedom in Anishinaabe and Canadian constitutional traditions[97] Anishinaabe people can “read” this bird as communicating liberty, choice, autonomy, and self-determination because of the narratives associated with it[98] When learning outdoors, I could reference hundreds of “cases” from the world’s living law library to illustrate legal relationships, processes, and principles. After a discussion of Anishinaabe laws from our oral traditions, I might then reference various written Anishinaabe constitutional freedoms before discussing Anishinaabe Tribal Court cases dealing with these responsibilities[99] This would eventually lead to discussions of section 7 Charter rights to life, liberty, and security, as we compared and contrasted Supreme Court of Canada approaches with Anishinaabe constitutionalism on this point[100] Finally, I might drum and sing an Anishinaabe song referencing freedom, or discuss the etymology of freedom in Anishinaabemowin, dibenindizowin, which can mean that a person possesses liberty within themselves and their relationships[101]

Fortunately, the students embraced working together through the challenges of COVID-19, despite our distance and bi-weekly transsystemic constitutional law classes held over Zoom, the videoconferencing software. With their enthusiasm and modifications to the curriculum, we learned and applied Anishinaabe and Canadian constitutionalism in a revised format. Six months after the course was finished, the students presented me with a small book of reflections regarding what they learned during the year. In their short commentary, I was encouraged to see that Anishinaabemowin (the Ojibwe language) figured prominently. In regard to constitutional law, they discussed debwewin (truth)[102] wazhashkoonh (muskrat)[103] giiwedanang (the north star)[104] zaagi’idiwin (love)[105] aamoyag (bees)[106] manidoo makwa (spirit bear song)[107] michi-dawadanaa (space or the great opening)[108] akinoomagewin (learning from the earth)[109] nigig (otter from clan teachers)[110] memengwaag (butterflies)[111] aabawaawendam (forgiveness)[112] ningowaaso-miigiwewin (seven gifts or ancestral teachings)[113] bimaadiziwin (life)[114] zoongidewin (courage)[115] and nibwaakaawin (wisdom)[116] Of course, the students also learned principles of federalism, Aboriginal and treaty rights, and Charter rights from both Anishinaabe and Canadian constitutional perspectives in our time together. However, the students’ messages to me emphasized that they were thinking more broadly about the materials than often occurs in a conventional first year constitutional law course. In fact, I hope that you can see from the Anishinaabe words above that the students were engaging with constitutional themes discussed in this essay: where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going. All of this once again demonstrates how students are taking significant steps in advancing the resurgence of Indigenous law.

When students learn about Indigenous legal traditions, they discover other ways of formulating and practicing law. For instance, Indigenous peoples’ law is often explicitly connected to their community aspirations, such as commitments to a living earth, intergenerational care, and healing. These kinds of principles cause students to ask questions about life’s potential purposes raised by these ambitions. Of course, Indigenous peoples (like all other legal communities) do not always live up to their highest aspirations, and this causes students to inquire about human frailty in relation to law, too. Moreover, the students also learn about the challenges that Indigenous peoples encounter in meeting their goals within Canadian law because it marginalizes them. These concerns cause students to pose further questions about fairness and justice, whether life has any meaning, or whether they can discern its broader purposes.

Conclusion: Education, the Meaning of Life, and Indigenous Law

At the end of this essay, I return to the question: What is the meaning of life? This paper suggests that, if there is an answer, it revolves in part around our capacities for growth. Student initiatives, described in this essay, exemplify this pattern. As we grow, we enhance our abilities to discern our own life’s purposes. As we learn, we gain insight about where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going. In this quest, we benefit from comparing, contrasting, considering, criticizing, concurring, and rejecting other people’s views. To illustrate this process, we have considered how law schools, and perhaps even broader society, benefit from understanding Indigenous perspectives that were previously marginalized and concealed. These examples suggest that discovering life’s meaning is not solely an individual experience; it flows from the quality and sustainability of our relationships. This suggests that humans make their own meanings even as forces beyond our control also form our purposes.

If understanding life’s meanings is simultaneously within and beyond our capacities, this implies that we should work hard to apprehend it, while also recognizing the potential impossibility of the aim. If this seems like a contradiction, it is a healthy one. This paradox facilitates creativity. Striving to understand life’s purposes while accepting the task’s possible futility pushes us into unknown territory. This creates a constructive tension that is key to learning.

Education would be regressive if its sole purpose was to confirm what we already know. It would lose its dynamic power if it merely involved the restatement of pre-existing truths. However, as this essay has shown, using Indigenous examples, education must go further and challenge our assumptions and practices. It must move beyond repetition or risk becoming an empty ritual. Replicating what we already know is necessary, but insufficient, to meet our own needs and society’s demands.

Fortunately, student research, advocacy, negotiation, and hard work are widening our views about what at times seems impossible—respecting Indigenous peoples’ search for life’s purposes within and beyond Canada’s legal frameworks. This work is slowly gaining momentum as students shed greater light on our collective past, present, and future. In the process, this impacts society as a whole, as student ideas and research spread beyond universities through their work[117]

Despite the immensity of the task, whether finding the meaning of life or changing Canada’s legal structure as it relates to Indigenous peoples, there is great worth in tackling what seems impossible. Challenging the status quo can help us see more clearly where we came from, why we are here, and where we are going as individuals and society, even if we do not believe or appreciate the answers that we receive.