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

Roots and Bridges: APRU Indigenous Connections Seminar Series 2025

After the success of the seminar series in 2024, the Roots and Bridges: APRU Indigenous Connections Seminar Series will continue in 2025, giving 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: Waipapa Toitū: Developing a cultural framework to privilege knowledge of people and place

Date:
May 29, 2025, 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm (Ecuador Time: UTC/GMT -5 hours)
May 30, 2025, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)
May 30, 2025, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm (Auckland, NZ Time: UTC/GMT +12 hours)

Check your local time here

Speakers:
Michael Steedman
Kaiarataki Deputy Pro Vice-Chancellor (Māori)
The University of Auckland Waipapa Taumata Rau

Abstract:
My talk is based on an auto-ethnographic study of the ongoing process of developing and embedding an Indigenous Framework in a non-indigenous organisation – the University of Auckland. The Framework, named Waipapa Toitū, aims to reset the institutional narrative, informed by a Māori lens. Mātauranga ā-whenua, ā-iwi is a framework of thinking proposed by the work of Dr Hirini Kaa and it connects to the knowledge of our tūpuna (ancestors) handed to us through the generations. Waipapa Toitū uses this framing and is a representation of those connections. I will discuss the framework and its origins and how it can apply at Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland.

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

 

Seminar #2: Taste of Sovereignty: Symbolic and Linguistic Dimensions of Indigenous Food Systems

Date:
June 26, 2025, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm (Vancouver, Canada Time: UTC/GMT -7 hours)
June 26, 2025, 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm
(Ecuador Time: UTC/GMT -5 hours)
June 27, 2025, 9:00 am – 10:00 am (Hong Kong Time: UTC/GMT +8 hours)

Check your local time and date here

Speaker:
Celina G. Solís B.
Research Associate
University of British Columbia

Abstract:
Despite undeniable advancements in the literature and practical initiatives related to food sovereingty,(agro) biodiversity conservation, fair trade, agroecology and sustainable food systems, he symbolic and linguistic dimensions of food continue to be rarely incorporated. By exploring the case of Mayan-Tsotsil and Tseltal foods in the Southeast of Mexico, this talk discusses how the cultural aspects, such as Indigenous language and symbolic meanings of food, play a crucial role in addressing ongoing issues of food colonialism, the lack of sovereignty, and food inequity among Indigenous communities.

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

 

More information coming soon

More information coming soon

More information coming soon

More information coming soon

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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Michael Steedman
The University of Auckland Waipapa Taumata Rau

Ko Maungakiekie te maunga (Maungakiekie is the mountain)

Ko Waitematā te moana (Waitematā is the sea)

Ko Ōrākei te marae (Ōrākei is the marae)

Ko Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei te iwi (I am of Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei)

Ko Michael Steedman taku ingoa (Michael Steedman is my name)

My pepeha (personal introduction of place) above describes my origin story. I serve as Kaiarataki (deputy Pro Vice-Chancellor Māori) in the office of the PVC Māori. I provide strategic leadership, operational connectivity, all of which is informed by the tikanga practices of place and people. My iwi (tribe) is of the whenua upon which the university resides. Part of my role is to facilitate our tribal martial arts school amongst other responsibilities. I also perform kapa haka (māori performing arts) with a group called Hātea Kapa Haka.

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Celina Solis
University of British Columbia

Celina is an interdisciplinary researcher with a robust background in food colonialism, traditional ecological knowledge, and holistic community well-being. With professional and personal experiences in Canada and Mexico, she has been involved with Indigenous communities with experience in community participatory-action research, drawing upon Indigenous methodologies. She completed her PhD in Integrated Studies and Food Systems at the University of British Columbia (UBC), focusing her doctoral research on expanding Indigenous food sovereignty through traditional cuisine as a way to revitalize responsible people-biodiversity relationships in the Tsotsil-Tseltal Region of Chiapas, Mexico.

Currently, Celina is a Research Associate at the Birth Place Lab (BPL) in the UBC Faculty of Medicine, where she conducts research addressing the disconnections between perinatal health services and the cultural needs of patients from different ethnic backgrounds across Canada.

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Enquiries

David Quimbayo

Program Officer

Email: [email protected]

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