Archives - The Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies 杏吧原创 University Mon, 13 Apr 2026 14:35:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 How Dr. Kahente Horn-Miller Is Reshaping Research鈥擮ne Story at a Time /iis/2026/reshaping-research-one-story-at-a-time/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=reshaping-research-one-story-at-a-time Mon, 13 Apr 2026 14:13:14 +0000 /iis/?p=8420 For Dr. Kahente Horn-Miller, research is not something separate from life鈥攊t is something lived, carried, and shared through story.

An Indigenous scholar, educator, and longhouse knowledge keeper, Dr. Horn-Miller approaches research as a form of responsibility grounded in community, relationship, and lived experience. As Associate Vice-President of Indigenous Teaching, Learning and Research at 杏吧原创 University and a professor in the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies, her work is redefining what research can look like鈥攁nd who it is for.

鈥淚t鈥檚 my form of activism,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hrough education, through research, through storytelling.鈥

At the centre of her work is Indigenous storytelling鈥攏ot simply as a way of communicating knowledge, but as a rigorous and embodied research methodology. Her approach challenges conventional academic boundaries, insisting on care, interdependence, and self-authorship.

Her current research builds on her doctoral work, Sky Woman鈥檚 Great Granddaughters, which explored identity among Kanien鈥檏eh谩:ka women from the Kahnaw脿:ke Mohawk community. Through narrative inquiry, she examined how colonial systems鈥攆rom the Indian Act to broader political ideologies鈥攈ave shaped and constrained Indigenous identity, while also documenting how women reclaim identity through kinship, community, and Indigenous ways of knowing.

A defining element of that work was her reimagining of the Sky Woman creation story. Rather than analyzing the story from a distance, Dr. Horn-Miller voiced it in the first person鈥攅mbodying Sky Woman as both an ancestral figure and a methodological intervention.

What began as a research method has since evolved into a powerful solo performance piece presented in both academic and community spaces.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about telling our stories,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about telling them our way, on our own terms.鈥

By speaking from within the story, her work dissolves the boundaries between theory, narrative, and self. In doing so, it opens new possibilities for research as something relational and lived, rather than detached and purely analytical.

This emphasis on connection is central to her current thinking, particularly through the concept of 鈥渞esonance.鈥 Drawing on sociological theory while remaining grounded in Indigenous knowledge systems, Dr. Horn-Miller explores how modern life has distanced people from land, memory, and one another鈥攁nd how stories, ceremonies, and shared experiences can help restore those relationships.

She is now extending this work through immersive technologies designed with the same ethic of care. Projects such as 奥补鈥櫭秚拧颈鈥檊飞补:迟贸, a 360-degree longhouse experience, and Tsi tewateriweiast谩kwa, a virtual reality Indigenous learning space, invite participants into story in multisensory ways.

鈥淔aculty who鈥檝e experienced them say things like, 鈥業 felt it,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淎nd just like with the Sky Woman story, that鈥檚 the point.鈥

For Dr. Horn-Miller, these innovations are not about novelty, but about deepening connection鈥攗sing contemporary tools to support longstanding ways of knowing.

That commitment is guided by the Haudenosaunee principle often described as thinking for the next seven generations. Whether in research, teaching, or leadership, she continually asks how today鈥檚 decisions will shape the future.

鈥淚鈥檓 always thinking: how will this benefit our children鈥檚 children鈥檚 children?鈥

This perspective also informs her work at the institutional level. From developing 杏吧原创鈥檚 Collaborative Indigenous Learning Bundles to contributing to the university鈥檚 Calls to Action, Dr. Horn-Miller works across disciplines to bring Indigenous knowledge into the academy on its own terms.

At the same time, she engages directly with the challenges shaping contemporary conversations around Indigenous identity, belonging, and appropriation. Rather than avoiding difficult discussions, she creates space for dialogue grounded in practice and care. Initiatives like the Ojig矛jowewin Legal Symposium bring together scholars and community members to explore how Indigenous legal traditions can guide real-world questions around conflict, governance, and belonging.

Her work also extends into community-based research. A new mapping initiative at Kitigan Zibi will support Algonquin youth in documenting place names, stories, and ecological knowledge鈥攐ften in their own language.

鈥淭hese tools aren鈥檛 just maps,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e invitations for young people to ask their families, 鈥楥an you tell me about this place?鈥欌

For Dr. Horn-Miller, this work is about more than preservation鈥攊t is about continuity. By bringing together storytelling, technology, language, and land-based knowledge, her research connects generations and challenges conventional ideas of innovation.

In doing so, she reminds us that some of the most forward-looking forms of research are rooted in the oldest relationships鈥攂etween people, land, language, and story.


Read the full FASS Research Review (Page 8):

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How Dr. Evelyn Namakula Mayanja Is Rethinking Resource Extraction, Violence, and Peacekeeping /iis/2026/rethinking-resource-extraction-violence-and-peacekeeping/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rethinking-resource-extraction-violence-and-peacekeeping Mon, 13 Apr 2026 14:08:42 +0000 /iis/?p=8418 From smartphones to electric vehicles, many of the technologies shaping modern life depend on minerals sourced from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). But behind this global supply chain lies a far more complex and troubling reality鈥攐ne that Dr. Evelyn Namakula Mayanja is working to uncover.

An interdisciplinary scholar, Dr. Mayanja鈥檚 research examines the intersections of resource extraction, conflict, and global peacekeeping, with a particular focus on African contexts. Her work sheds light on how mineral wealth鈥攔ather than fostering development鈥攈as contributed to prolonged violence, environmental destruction, and humanitarian crisis in the DRC.

The country is rich in critical resources such as copper, lithium, and cobalt鈥攅ssential for green energy technologies like electric vehicle batteries, solar panels, and wind turbines鈥攁s well as gold, diamonds, and other valuable minerals. Yet this abundance has come at an extraordinary cost.

Since the late 1990s, Congolese communities have faced sustained violence, displacement, and deep insecurity, as natural resources are extracted to meet global demand. Dr. Mayanja鈥檚 research highlights how multinational corporations and global economic systems are implicated in these dynamics, often profiting from both the minerals themselves and the conditions under which they are obtained.

Witnessing these realities firsthand is what drew her to this field of study.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how people are going to survive in the next 10 years,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he environment on which their livelihood depends has been destroyed beyond recognition, and communities have been displaced.鈥

Through interviews and fieldwork in the DRC, Dr. Mayanja documents how extractive industries shape everyday life in affected communities. She situates this violence within a longer historical context, pointing to colonial patterns of exploitation that continue to influence the present.

鈥淰iolence has been used to access Congo鈥檚 resources,鈥 she explains. 鈥淭here are also issues of misgovernance, but this continues the manipulation of Africa.鈥

Her research also critically examines the role of international peacekeeping missions in the region. While such missions are intended to stabilize conflict zones, Dr. Mayanja argues that their impact is often more complicated.

鈥淗ow can they be interested in both peace and exploiting resources at the same time?鈥 she asks. 鈥淭here is an incongruency between them. Even the word is a misnomer鈥攈ow can you say they are keeping peace where it does not exist?鈥

Rather than relying solely on external interventions, Dr. Mayanja emphasizes the importance of locally grounded approaches to peacebuilding.

鈥淲e need Afrocentric peacebuilding, peace-making, and resource governance,鈥 she says.

At the same time, she underscores the responsibility of international actors鈥攑articularly in enforcing regulations on mining companies operating both in the DRC and abroad. Accountability, she argues, must extend beyond borders when environmental destruction and human rights violations occur.

Looking ahead, Dr. Mayanja advocates for more inclusive and decolonial approaches to research and knowledge-sharing. She calls for greater recognition of Indigenous and community-based knowledge systems, particularly in regions where such knowledge is at risk of being lost.

鈥淭here are so many different ways of collecting and transmitting knowledge,鈥 she notes. 鈥淎frocentric approaches such as music, theatre, and dance can be more appropriate in some contexts.鈥

She also envisions universities as spaces where community voices can be heard more directly, and where lived experiences are treated as vital forms of knowledge.

鈥淚t would be so impactful to bring people from these communities here to share their stories,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ecause it is not all about violence. It is not all about resources. We are humans too. We have stories to tell.鈥

Dr. Mayanja鈥檚 work challenges us to think more critically about the global systems we are part of鈥攁nd to recognize the human stories at the heart of them.


Read the full FASS Research Review (Page 14):

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Annual J. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest 2026 /iis/2026/annual-j-carlisle-hanson-essay-contest-2026/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=annual-j-carlisle-hanson-essay-contest-2026 Tue, 10 Feb 2026 15:33:51 +0000 /iis/?p=8348 The Human Rights and Social Justice Program invites submissions for the annual J. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest.

Application Deadline: Friday, March 13th, 2026

杏吧原创 the Award

The J. Carlisle Hanson Award in Human Rights is awarded annually on the recommendation of the Director of the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies to a student enrolled in the human rights program who submits the best essay addressing the topic of human rights and democracy. Essays are also invited to examine the topics from a Canadian Perspective. Endowed in 2007 by J. Carlisle Hanson, Q.C.

There will be two prizes of $1,000.

Eligibility

  • The contest is open to students who are majoring in Human Rights and Social Justice in a B.A. General, a B.A. Honours, or a B.A. Combined Honours program.
  • The essays under consideration should have been written for one of your courses during the 2025-26 academic years (Spring/Summer 2025, Fall 2025, Winter 2026).聽 You are welcome to revise these essays and incorporate instructors鈥 feedback to prepare your essay for submission.
  • Your chosen essay should have been awarded a grade in the A range.
  • You are eligible to submit only one essay per academic year.

Submission Guidelines

Essay length: 8-20 pages

Format: Typed, double-spaced, with one-inch margins. Number your pages.

Citation Style:聽 MLA, APA, Chicago, or McGill styles are all acceptable. Only entries that are fully and properly documented will be considered.

The following information must be included on a title page:

  1. Name and student number
  2. Course code and professor鈥檚 name for the course in which the paper was written
  3. Date the paper was submitted

NB: Your essay will be reviewed anonymously: please make sure that your name does not appear on any pages after the title page.

Essays shall be submitted electronically in pdf/word format to the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies – iis@carleton.ca.

Please write 鈥淛. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest Submission鈥 in the subject line.

Application Deadline: Friday, March 13th, 2026

Late submissions will not be considered.

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Dr. Evelyn Mayanja’s latest article on the conflict in Eastern Congo /iis/2025/dr-evelyn-mayanjas-latest-article-on-the-conflict-in-eastern-congo/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=dr-evelyn-mayanjas-latest-article-on-the-conflict-in-eastern-congo Thu, 13 Feb 2025 19:45:29 +0000 /iis/?p=8137 M23鈥檚 capture of Goma is the latest chapter in eastern Congo鈥檚 long-running war

At a recent summit in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, leaders of eight African states released a statement calling for an in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The statement comes after a flareup in fighting in eastern DRC that has killed hundred and wounded thousands.

On Jan. 31, 2025 the rebel group known as the captured the city of Goma in the eastern DRC. At a news conference, Corneille Nangaa, leader of the Congo River Alliance that includes M23, declared that they were and would march to the DRC鈥檚 capital of Kinshasa.

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Annual J. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest 2025 /iis/2025/annual-j-carlisle-hanson-essay-contest-2025/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=annual-j-carlisle-hanson-essay-contest-2025 Thu, 06 Feb 2025 13:41:08 +0000 /iis/?p=8133 The Human Rights and Social Justice Program invites submissions for the annual J. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest.

Application Deadline: Friday, April 11th, 2025

杏吧原创 the Award

The J. Carlisle Hanson Award in Human Rights is awarded annually on the recommendation of the Director of the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies to a student enrolled in the human rights program who submits the best essay addressing the topic of human rights and democracy. Essays are also invited to examine the topics from a Canadian Perspective. Endowed in 2007 by J. Carlisle Hanson, Q.C.

There will be three prizes of $1,000.

Eligibility

  • The contest is open to students who are majoring in Human Rights and Social Justice in a B.A. General, a B.A. Honours, or a B.A. Combined Honours program.
  • The essays under consideration should have been written for one of your courses during the 2024-25 academic years (Spring/Summer 2024, Fall 2024, Winter 2025).聽 You are welcome to revise these essays and incorporate instructors鈥 feedback to prepare your essay for submission.
  • Your chosen essay should have been awarded a grade in the A range.
  • You are eligible to submit only one essay per academic year.

Submission Guidelines

Essay length: 8-20 pages

Format: Typed, double-spaced, with one-inch margins. Number your pages.

Citation Style:聽 MLA, APA, Chicago, or McGill styles are all acceptable. Only entries that are fully and properly documented will be considered.

The following information must be included on a title page:

  1. Name and student number
  2. Course code and professor鈥檚 name for the course in which the paper was written
  3. Date the paper was submitted

NB: Your essay will be reviewed anonymously: please make sure that your name does not appear on any pages after the title page.

Essays shall be submitted electronically in pdf/word format to the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies – iis@carleton.ca.

Please write 鈥淛. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest Submission鈥 in the subject line.

Application Deadline: Friday, April 11th, 2025

Late submissions will not be considered.

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Human Rights Alumna wins Rotary Peace Fellowship /iis/2024/alumni-wins-rotary-peace-fellowship/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=alumni-wins-rotary-peace-fellowship Tue, 06 Aug 2024 16:04:57 +0000 /iis/?p=7778 The Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies congratulates Sam Murray, an Alumna of the Human Rights & Social Justice program on being recently awarded the Rotary Peace Fellowship. Sam will begin a graduate degree in Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Queensland in Australia.

Congratulations! and Best wishes

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Two Distinguished Visiting Scholars Joining 杏吧原创 /anako/2024/the-arrival-of-two-distinguished-visiting-sholars/#new_tab?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=two-distinguished-visiting-scholars-joining-carleton Tue, 18 Jun 2024 21:20:29 +0000 /iis/?p=7729 Dr. Antonia Carcel茅n鈥怑strada and Dr. Laura Forsythe will be joining 杏吧原创 for the 2024/25 academic year as visiting scholars.

Dr. Antonia Carcel茅n鈥怑strada will teach Global Indigenous Knowledge-Adaptive Research Methods to Indigenous Communities while Dr. Laura Forsythe will lead a course on M茅tis Methodologies both in the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies.

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Annual J. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest 2024 /iis/2024/annual-j-carlisle-hanson-essay-contest-2024/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=annual-j-carlisle-hanson-essay-contest-2024 Wed, 31 Jan 2024 14:58:28 +0000 /iis/?p=7540 The Human Rights and Social Justice Program invites submissions for the annual J. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest.

杏吧原创 the Award
The J. Carlisle Hanson Award in Human Rights is awarded annually on the recommendation of the Director of the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies to a student enrolled in the human rights program who submits the best essay addressing the topic of human rights and democracy. Essays are also invited to examine the topics from a Canadian Perspective. Endowed in 2007 by J. Carlisle Hanson, Q.C.

There will be two prizes of $1,000.

Eligibility

  • The contest is open to students who are majoring in Human Rights and Social Justice in a B.A. General, a B.A. Honours, or a B.A. Combined Honours program.
  • The essays under consideration should have been written for one of your courses during the 2023-24 academic years (Spring/Summer 2023, Fall 2023, Winter 2024).聽 You are welcome to revise these essays and incorporate instructors鈥 feedback to prepare your essay for submission.
  • Your chosen essay should have been awarded a grade in the A range.
  • You are eligible to submit only one essay per academic year.

Submission Guidelines

Essay length: 8-20 pages

Format: Typed, double-spaced, with one-inch margins. Number your pages.

Citation Style:聽 MLA, APA, Chicago, or McGill styles are all acceptable. Only entries that are fully and properly documented will be considered.

The following information must be included on a title page:

  1. Name and student number
  2. Course code and professor鈥檚 name for the course in which the paper was written
  3. Date the paper was submitted

NB: Your essay will be reviewed anonymously: please make sure that your name does not appear on any pages after the title page.

Essays shall be submitted electronically in pdf/word format to the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies – iis@carleton.ca.

Please write 鈥淛. Carlisle Hanson Essay Contest Submission鈥 in the subject line.

Application Deadline: Friday, May 10th, 2024

Late submissions will not be considered.

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