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Sarah Hunt / Tłaliłila’ogwa

Sarah Hunt - Environmental Studies

Associate professor & Canada Research Chair, Indigenous political ecology

Environmental Studies

Status:
On leave July 2024 - June 2025

Accepting graduate students

Contact:
Office: DTB A133 250-472-5828
ORCID:
Credentials:
PhD (SFU, Geography, 2014)
Area of expertise:
Indigenous feminisms, legal geographies, Indigenous geographies, Indigenous justice and law, coastal peoples, decolonial methodologies, community-based research.

Office Hours

By appointment only.

Interests

  • gendered nature of governance for Indigenous people
  • coastal justice
  • Indigenous political ecologies across the scales of the intimate (body) and relational (land/water)

About Sarah Hunt / Tłaliłila’ogwa

Sarah Hunt / Tłaliłila’ogwa is a Two-Spirit queer (2SQ) scholar-activist who has spent more than two decades engaged in research by, with and for Indigenous people and communities, with a focus on the relationship between more intimate or embodied scales of Indigenous life and the governance of lands, waters, and relationships across the natural and supernatural worlds. Having joined UVic in 2020 as Canada Research Chair in Indigenous political ecology, Sarah’s research seeks to redefine justice and foster expressions of self-determination through land-based and cultural practices which center gender diverse people, women and youth. Through the Coastal Justice Collective, Sarah works collaboratively with students, community members, and other colleagues in addressing intersecting questions of power, wellbeing, and knowledge sovereignty.

Dr. Hunt / Tłaliłila’ogwa is Kwakwaka’wakw, from the Kwagu’ł and Dzawada’enuxw Nations, and is also of Ukrainian and English settler ancestry. Sarah's scholarship has a particular focus on coastal worldviews and ways of knowing, woven through both theory and praxis.

Tłaliłila’ogwa is an editor with the journal and board member of the . Sarah is the recipient of the UVic President's Distinguished Alumni Award (2022), AAG Glenda Laws Award For Social Justice (2017) and Governor General's Gold Medal (2014).

I am accepting graduate students with an explicit focus on the gendered nature of justice for Indigenous people and communities, particularly coastal First Nations.

Publications

Please see Sarah's  for up-to-date publications.