Indigenous Knowledge & Abolition
Indigenous Knowledge and Abolition: Criminalization, Decolonization and Lessons from Indigenous Justice Systems
Processes and practices of criminalization and incarceration have always been tied to settler-colonial endeavours to appropriate and occupy Indigenous lands. As such, the impact of incarceration and criminalization on Indigenous peoples plays a critical role in the ongoing colonization of Turtle Island, and our abolitionist efforts must be decolonial.
At the same time, Indigenous communities across Turtle Island have long practiced alternative and restorative justice systems, which are important for thinking through decarceral futures.
This panel brings together Indigenous and anti-colonial community members, frontline workers, and researchers to discuss the impact of the current pandemic on incarcerated Indigenous peoples, as well as the important lessons and models which Indigenous world-views offer for imagining and realizing prison abolition.
Speakers to be announced soon!
WATCH THE LIVESTREAM on ZOOM:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83917084869
Note: This webinar will have automatically generated closed-captions. After the event, a recording will be made available online.
TAKE ACTION:
Demand personal protection, decarceration, and free communication for prisoners during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Use our 3 easy email ZAP tools every week: https://linktr.ee/prisonerrightsproject
DONATE:
Support the COVID-19 Emergency Support Fund for Prisoners and their families to help those being released into the community and those left behind bars: