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Members

All My Relations has members from across Thompson Rivers University and globally.

International Fellows

Professor Graham Smith

Professor Graham Smith is a prominent Māori educationalist and advocate who has been at the forefront of alternative Māori initiatives in the education field and beyond. His academic background is within the disciplines of Education, Social Anthropology and Cultural and Policy Studies. More specifically, his academic work has centred on developing theoretically informed transformative strategies related to intervening in Māori cultural, political, social, educational and economic crises.

Professor Tracey McIntosh

Tracey McIntosh (Ngāi Tūhoe) has presented internationally on her groundbreaking research. She is a Professor and teaches in the sociology and criminology programme at the University of Auckland. Her current areas of research are women in prison – particularly Māori women, while she also while also looking at male ex-prisoners with gang associations.She is particularly interested in looking at the intergenerational transfer of social inequalities, focusing the prison situation in New Zealand where the country has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world and also one of the highest levels of racial disproportionality.

Thompson Rivers University 

 

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The campuses of Thompson Rivers University are located on the traditional and unceded territory of the Secwepemc Nation within Secwepemcul’ecw. As we share knowledge, teaching, learning and research within this university, we recognize that this territory has always been a place of teaching, learning and research.

We respectfully acknowledge the Secwepemc—the peoples who have lived here for thousands of years, and who today are a Nation of 17 Bands.

We acknowledge Tk’emlúps te Secwepemc.

We acknowledge T’exelcemc and Xat’súll.

We acknowledge the many Indigenous peoples from across this land.

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