Key Partners
About the series
Seminar #1: 2/3 May
Seminar #2: 30/31 May
Seminar #3: 27/28 Jun
Seminar #4: 25/26 Jul
Seminar #5: 29/30 Aug
Seminar #6: 26/27 Sep
Seminar #7: 24/25 Oct
Seminar #8: 28/29 Nov

Roots and Bridges: APRU Indigenous Connections Seminar Series

This seminar series gives academics and students from APRU member universities and other guest universities the opportunity to share works-in-progress, exchange insightful ideas and strategies, and explore relevant topics related to Indigenous Peoples and communities from the Asia-Pacific region.

Network researchers from a broad range of academic fields will present their fieldwork, research, methodologies, insights, and findings during eight virtual events. The series aims to present, explore, and extend the possibilities of international collaborations among the participants. They will highlight Indigenous-led methodologies, Indigenous and First Nations knowledges, languages place-based research, leadership programs, teaching and learning, and related topics.

Seminar series aims:

  1. Share knowledge among APRU member universities, staff and students
  2. Connect researchers, educators, professional staff, students and community members
  3. Encourage collaboration across countries, universities and disciplines
  4. Amplify Indigenous voices and visions

Course Format and Delivery

This series will be conducted on a virtual platform (Zoom) synchronously.

 

Click on the different tabs to learn more about the seminars.

Seminar #1: From Stage to Campus: Fostering Indigenous Well-being in Universities

Date:
May 2, 2024, 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm (Ecuador Time: UTC/GMT -5 hours)
May 3, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)
May 3, 2024, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm (Auckland, NZ Time: UTC/GMT +12 hours)

Check your local time here

Speakers:
Prof. Linda Waimarie Nikora, Director Faculty of Arts, Waipapa Taumata Rau | The University of Auckland

Associate Professor Te Kawehau Hoskins (Ngāti Hau, Ngāpuhi), Pro Vice-Chancellor Māori, The University of Auckland

Abstract:
Over the past five decades, kapa haka, the traditional Māori performing arts of New Zealand, has garnered global recognition and become deeply woven into the cultural tapestry of Aotearoa New Zealand. In 2021, Professor Linda Waimarie Nikora and colleagues explored the value and wellness contributions made by kapa haka to performers, audiences, and communities. The study resulted in the development of the Hine Te Rēhia analytical framework, comprising four key domains: Tūrangawaewae, which underscores a sense of belonging and community; Mātauranga, focusing on knowledge acquisition and learning pathways; Ihiihi, acknowledging the expressive power inherent in kapa haka; and Hauora, recognizing the holistic well-being benefits derived from kapa haka practices. In this seminar, Professor Nikora will explore how the Hine Te Rehia framework can be leveraged to cultivate a robust Indigenous sense of community within universities, fostering an environment where Indigenous students and staff can thrive and flourish.

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Registration here

Seminar #2: Indigenous Studies at Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia

Date:
May 30, 2024, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm (Burnaby, Canada Time: UTC/GMT -7 hours)
May 31, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)

Check your local time and date here

Speaker:
Prof. Eldon Yellowhorn, Simon Fraser University

Abstract:
Indigenous Studies at Simon Fraser University has a growing research program dedicated to examining indigeneity in the Canadian context. Since its establishment in 2012, the Department of Indigenous Studies has developed community partnerships with several first nations focusing on participatory action research. Our faculty deploy their expertise in language revitalization, literature, life-writing, archaeology, customary ecological systems, indigenous knowledge, ethnobotany, and environmental activism to advance our understanding of Indigenous people and their place in the modern world. I will introduce the campus where our research begins and the people and resources we use to engage with the broader community.

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Registration here

Seminar #3: Institutionalizing Indigenous Studies in the University:  The Case of University of the Philippines Baguio

Date:
June 28, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong/Philippines Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)

Speaker:
Prof. Raymundo Rovillos, University of the Philippines

Abstract:
In this lecture,  I will narrate, as well as reflect, on my experience as one of the leaders of the institutionalization of the Indigenous Studies Program (ISP) of the University of the Philippines Baguio.  The doctoral program was unanimously approved by the Board of Regents of the University of the Philippines (UP) in April, 2021. This, after more than a decade of faculty meetings, conferences and deliberations from the disciplinal to university levels.  Beyond the narratives, the lecture shall dwell on the philosophical (epistemological, ontological, methodological and ethical)  issues that surfaced during the discursive deliberations by faculty and how we attempted to “resolve”  the differences.  After four years of implementing the program,  we now have the benefit of experience and hindsight to be able to reflect on what has worked best, what needs improvement and what does not seem to work. I hope that my presentation will inform and inspire the academic community, especially those wanting to institute Indigenous Studies in their own institutions.

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Registration here

Date:
July 25, 2024, 10:00 pm – 11:00 pm (Chile Time: UTC/GMT -4 hours)
July 26, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)

Speaker:
Prof. Ana Luisa Munoz, Universidad Católica de Chile

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

More details coming soon

Date:
August 29, 2024, 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm (Ecuador Time: UTC/GMT -5 hours)
August 30, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)

Speaker:
Prof. Fredy Grefa, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

More details coming soon

Date:
September 26, 2024, 10:00 pm – 11:00 pm (Chile Time: UTC/GMT -4 hours)
September 27, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)

Speaker:
Prof. Veronica Figueroa Huencho, Universidad de Chile

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

More details coming soon

Seminar #7: Haʻi moʻolelo: Native hawaiian faculty stories on their technology use

Date:
October 24, 2024, 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm (Hawai’i Time: UTC/GMT -10 hours)
October 25, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)

Check your local time and date here

Speaker:
Prof. Pi’ilani Kaaloa, Associate Specialist, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa

Abstract:
As a Native Hawaiian instructional designer, one unique challenge my indigenous faculty face is the integration of instructional technology into their work. Haʻi moʻolelo (collective narratives) was used to examine the influence of  core cultural beliefs on decision making of faculty to select instructional technology tools to use in their teaching and research. From the stories of Native Hawaiian educators from a range of faculty ranks, years of teaching experience, and academic disciplines or fields, I share the collective influence of I ka wā ma mua, ka wā ma hope (the time in front and the time in back), Kuleana (rights, responsibility, and authority), Pono (well-being in relationship) and Mahalo (respect in relationship) in their choice to use instructional technologies.

Expected audience:
The presentation will be relevant to anyone experiencing challenges with higher education technology adoption and those interested in the examination of their relationship with their cultural beliefs as a possibility for these challenges.

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Registration here

Seminar #8: Decolonisation in Action

Date:
November 29, 2024, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong/Malaysia: UTC/GMT +8 hours )
November 29, 2024, 11:30 am – 12:30 pm (ACST: UTC/GMT +9:30 hours)

Check your local time and date here

Speakers:
Prof. Kam Kaur, The University of Adelaide
Prof. Welyne Jeffrey, Universiti Malaya

Abstract:
Decolonisation is a longstanding endeavor, championed by First Nation Peoples and decolonial scholars over the years to advocate for the integration of First Nation Knowledges across various spheres. As we delve deeper into these initiatives, it becomes apparent that we encounter significant challenges. One notable challenge in decolonial efforts is the necessity to confront colonial embodiment, ensuring that decolonial projects do not inadvertently reinforce colonial ideologies.For decolonisation to take meaningful shape, it is essential to foster anticolonial shifts within institutional frameworks that transcend both mental and physical barriers. In this presentation, we explore a recent project that emphasizes the transformation of our physical and psychological selves to cultivate anticolonial and decolonial experiences that defy conventional structures.

Seminar host:
Prof. David Romo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Registration here

Speakers

Speaker biography is listed in the order of the seminars.

Emeritus Prof. David Romo
Seminar Host - Emeritus Prof. Universidad San Francisco de Quito

David Romo, Ph.D. Emeritus professor from Universidad San Francisco de Quito.  Emeritus Director Tiputini Biodiversity Station. Prof. Romo directed the Program of Ethnic Diversity and was responsible for including over 700 indigenous and Afroecuadorian students to USFQ.

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Prof. Linda Waimarie Nikora
The University of Auckland

Professor Linda Waimarie Nikora, a leading academic, formerly directed the Māori & Psychology Research Unit at the University of Waikato. Since 2017, she has served as Professor of Indigenous Studies at the University of Auckland, also co-directing Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga, New Zealand’s Māori Centre of Research Excellence. Her expertise focuses on developing indigenous psychologies to benefit indigenous communities. Her research covers Maori flourishing, traditional mourning, identity, cultural competence, mental health, social determinants of health, homelessness, relational health, and social connectedness. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand and an Honorary Fellow of the New Zealand Psychological Society. She is of Te Aitanga-a-Hauiti, Tūhoe, and Rongowhakaata tribal groups.

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Prof. Te Kawehau Hoskins
The University of Auckland

As Ihonuku, Pro Vice-Chancellor Māori, Te Kawehau (Ngāti Hau, Ngāpuhi) focuses on developing a positive Māori profile within and about the University and helping develop Māori programmes in liaison with the Vice-Chancellor, Māori staff, students and the community.

She advises the University at all levels, from the Vice-Chancellor to the University Executive Committee and faculties through our management structure. At the faculty level, she works with kaiārahi to support both academic and professional staff. She maintains working relationships with Māori student groups.

Te Kawehau is also responsible for Waipapa Marae and the Rūnanga.

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Prof. Eldon Yellowhorn
Simon Fraser University

Dr. Eldon Yellowhorn is founding Chair of the Department of First Nations Studies at SFU (established in 2012 and now called Indigenous Studies). His internalist approach to archaeology guides his research program, which emphasizes antiquity on the northern Plains. His research on Blackfoot star lore and other oral narratives has yielded insights about archaeological manifestations such as communal hunting sites. His interests include elucidating the historical era, with a focus on the first generations of Piikani to experience reserve life. Since writing was not a local custom, he examines oral narratives, material culture, and archival documents to gain a clearer image about the daily life of people adapting to a new lifestyle. During his Piikani Historical Archaeology Project he conducted the first archaeological excavations of a residential school in Canada. He began his research of unmarked graves and abandoned cemeteries in 2009 for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). He continues this work with the objective of reclaiming the identities of children buried at these sites.

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Prof. Raymundo Rovillos
University of the Philippines

Dr. Raymundo D. Rovillos is a Professor of History and the former Chancellor of the University of the Philippines Baguio.  He led the process of institutionalizing, and later served as the first Coordinator of UP Baguio’s new Doctoral Program- the Indigenous Studies Program. Professor Rovillos is a scholar of a wide range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary fields, such as:  Cordillera History, Ethnohistory of the Tinguians/Itnegs (Abra), Indigenous Peoples’ Studies and Social Development Studies.  He has published in several refereed national and international journals and books.    Dr.  Rovillos is currently on leave from UP Baguio to serve, on secondment status, as the Interim President of Pangasinan Polytechnic College (PPC), a new community college locate in the north-central luzon, Philippines.

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Prof. Ana Luisa Munoz
Universidad Católica de Chile
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Dr. Fredy Grefa
Universidad San Francisco de Quito

I am an indigenous first-generation geographer (Napo Runa) trained in political ecology. I use Amazonian socioenvironmental values ​​such as Sumak Kawsay, The Living Forest, Muntun, Sacha Runa, among others to understand how Amazonian peoples make sense of living in rainforest environments. My research interest includes: indigenous epistemologies, the practice of indigenous knowledge marketization, through the case of market-based instruments for conservation, such as Payments for Ecosystem Services. I also explore the policy of hope; I see the work of indigenous peoples, not as a resistance, but in terms of resurgence and for this, I seek to create pedagogies to gather different worlds and reflect on how to connect between them.

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Prof. Veronica Figueroa Huencho
Universidad de Chile

She is an Indigenous Mapuche Full Professor at the Faculty of Government of the University of Chile. Ph.D in Management Sciences from ESADE-Universitat Ramón Llull (Barcelona). She was a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Latin American Studies at Stanford University and a Visiting Scholar at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University (2020). Professor Figueroa Huencho has important publications in indexed journals, as well as books and book chapters, where she has addressed the challenges of indigenous governance and the processes of formulation and implementation of indigenous public policies. She has also led different national and international research projects around these topics. At the University of Chile, she was Vice President of the University Senate for two periods, being the first woman and first Mapuche person to assume that responsibility. Likewise, she was the Director of the School of Government and Public Management from 2013 to 2015.  Recently, she was the Undersecretary of Higher Education in the government of President Gabriel Boric Font. Currently, she is President of the Council of Evaluation at the University of Chile. 

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Dr. Pi’ilani Kaaloa
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa

Dr. Rochelle Piʻilani Hussey Kaaloa is an Associate Specialist faculty in the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Kamakakūokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies, Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge. She has over twenty years of experience as an educator working and researching in the areas of indigenous education, online learning, and the incorporation of

technology to enhance teaching, learning, and research in ‘ike Hawaii. She has strong ties through her work in Native Hawaiian serving education programs and an established research agenda in the area of Native Hawaiian education, particularly in understanding the influences of cultural beliefs in instructional technology integration by higher education faculty in their teaching and advancing culturally relevant computer science education.

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Dr. Kameljeet Kaur
University of Adelaide

Dr. Kameljeet Kaur’s work at The University of Adelaide, specifically within Wirltu Yarlu, represents a significant contribution to the field of Indigenous Knowledge and education. Her role as a course coordinator and lecturer, focusing on Indigenous Knowledge, showcases a deep commitment to integrating First Nation pedagogies, decolonial methods, and critical theory into academia. By collaborating with local and global First Nation communities’ Elders, cultural leaders, and scholars, Dr. Kaur is at the forefront of constructing courses that are not only informed by Indigenous methodologies but also aim at decolonizing the educational framework.

The development of a virtual reality storytelling course, in partnership with Anangu Elders from the Anangu Pitjantjatjara situated in the far north west corner of South Australia and Kaurna Elders of the Adelaide Plains, is particularly noteworthy. This innovative approach seeks to leverage digital technologies to record and present Indigenous knowledge in a manner that is both accessible and immersive for students. Such initiatives are crucial for promoting understanding and respect for Indigenous ways of knowing, doing, and being among both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students.

Dr. Kaur’s research interests further highlight her dedication to addressing complex societal issues such as ‘race’ and gender inequalities, cultural diversity, and decolonization.

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Dr. Welyne Jeffrey
Universiti Malaya

Dr. Welyne Jeffrey Jehom is a Senior Lecturer in Anthropology and Sociology at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University Malaya. She has been a part of the university since 2016, previously contributing her expertise to the Gender Studies Program within the same faculty from 2008 to 2016. She spearheaded the Center for Malaysian Indigenous Studies as its head from 2018 to 2021 and currently serves as the Coordinator for the Master of Human Development program at Universiti Malaya, commencing in 2022. She is also recognized as a board member Asian Human Development Organisation (AHDO) Malaysia. Throughout her career, she has dedicated herself to impactful research, collaborating with various groups and Indigenous communities, and focusing on critical issues of development, decolonisation and empowerment. In addition to her academic responsibilities at Universiti Malaya, she plays a pivotal role in managing the Community Engagement Section for Enggang (Pekan), a conservation company under Enggang Holdings. Her multifaceted contributions in academia and community engagement underscore her commitment to fostering positive change and development within diverse spheres of influence.

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