Aimée Craft
Aimée Craft is an Indigenous (Anishinaabe-Métis) lawyer (called to the Bar in 2005) from Treaty 1 territory in Manitoba. She is currently an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Common law, University of Ottawa. Craft is the former Director of Research at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and the founding Director of Research at the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation. Her book, Breathing Life into the Stone Fort Treaty: An Anishnabe Understanding of Treaty One (2013) won the Eileen McTavish Sykes Award for Best First Book.

Breathing Life into the Stone Fort Treaty



A Knock on the Door

A Knock on the Door

A Knock on the Door

Vulnerable
contributions by Mona Gupta; Sam Halabi; Anis Chowdhury; Chidi Oguamanam; Lorian Hardcastle; Deborah McGregor; E. Richard Gold; Céline Castets-Renard; Linda Garcia; Amir Attaran; Michelle Giroux; Bryan Thomas; Ravi Malhotra; Matthew Herder; Olivia Lee; Mel Cappe; Yasmin Khaliq; Tim Caulfield; Kelly Bronson; Pat Armstrong; Martha Jackman; Simon Hatcher; Daniel Weinstock; Tess Sheldon; Leilani Farha; Jason Millar; Grégoire Webber; Vanessa Gruben; Jennifer A. Quaid; Paul Daly; Jane Philpott; Jennifer A. Chandler; Hugh Armstrong; Yves Le Bouthillier; Jomo Kwame Sundaram; Sarah Berger Richardson; Katherine Lippel; Aimée Craft; Katherine Fierlbeck; Jeffery Hewitt; Eleonore Fournier-Tombs; Patrick Fafard; Steven J. Hoffman; Adam R. Houston; David Robitaille; Carissima Mathen; Kaitlin Schwan; Jeremy de Beer; Kwame McKenzie; Jamie Chai Yun Liew; Martine Lagacé; Jeffrey Simpson; Alexandra Flynn; Marie-France Fortin; Louise Bélanger-Hardy; Kumanan Wilson; Teresa Scassa; Adelina Iftene; Anne Levesque; Vardit Ravitsky; Y. Y. Brandon Chen; Terry Skolnik; Ivy Bourgeault; Delphine Nakache & Jason W. Nickerson
"The pandemic is not a natural disaster or an “act of God.” The effects of COVID-19 are the result of choices: to tax and spend in ways that benefit some and disadvantage others; to intervene or not intervene in the economy when market forces prevent individuals from meeting basic needs; to regulate in particular ways; to view health as the product of a combination of luck and personal choices rather than the product of colliding social, economic, and political factors; and to adopt particular foreign policies toward international cooperation, including foreign aid."

Vulnerable
contributions by Mona Gupta; Sam Halabi; Anis Chowdhury; Chidi Oguamanam; Lorian Hardcastle; Deborah McGregor; E. Richard Gold; Céline Castets-Renard; Linda Garcia; Amir Attaran; Michelle Giroux; Bryan Thomas; Ravi Malhotra; Matthew Herder; Olivia Lee; Mel Cappe; Yasmin Khaliq; Tim Caulfield; Kelly Bronson; Pat Armstrong; Martha Jackman; Simon Hatcher; Daniel Weinstock; Tess Sheldon; Leilani Farha; Jason Millar; Grégoire Webber; Vanessa Gruben; Jennifer A. Quaid; Paul Daly; Jane Philpott; Jennifer A. Chandler; Hugh Armstrong; Yves Le Bouthillier; Jomo Kwame Sundaram; Sarah Berger Richardson; Katherine Lippel; Aimée Craft; Katherine Fierlbeck; Jeffery Hewitt; Eleonore Fournier-Tombs; Patrick Fafard; Steven J. Hoffman; Adam R. Houston; David Robitaille; Carissima Mathen; Kaitlin Schwan; Jeremy de Beer; Kwame McKenzie; Jamie Chai Yun Liew; Martine Lagacé; Jeffrey Simpson; Alexandra Flynn; Marie-France Fortin; Louise Bélanger-Hardy; Kumanan Wilson; Teresa Scassa; Adelina Iftene; Anne Levesque; Vardit Ravitsky; Y. Y. Brandon Chen; Terry Skolnik; Ivy Bourgeault; Delphine Nakache & Jason W. Nickerson
"The pandemic is not a natural disaster or an “act of God.” The effects of COVID-19 are the result of choices: to tax and spend in ways that benefit some and disadvantage others; to intervene or not intervene in the economy when market forces prevent individuals from meeting basic needs; to regulate in particular ways; to view health as the product of a combination of luck and personal choices rather than the product of colliding social, economic, and political factors; and to adopt particular foreign policies toward international cooperation, including foreign aid."

Vulnerable
contributions by Mona Gupta; Sam Halabi; Anis Chowdhury; Chidi Oguamanam; Lorian Hardcastle; Deborah McGregor; E. Richard Gold; Céline Castets-Renard; Linda Garcia; Amir Attaran; Michelle Giroux; Bryan Thomas; Ravi Malhotra; Matthew Herder; Olivia Lee; Mel Cappe; Yasmin Khaliq; Tim Caulfield; Kelly Bronson; Pat Armstrong; Martha Jackman; Simon Hatcher; Daniel Weinstock; Tess Sheldon; Leilani Farha; Jason Millar; Grégoire Webber; Vanessa Gruben; Jennifer A. Quaid; Paul Daly; Jane Philpott; Jennifer A. Chandler; Hugh Armstrong; Yves Le Bouthillier; Jomo Kwame Sundaram; Sarah Berger Richardson; Katherine Lippel; Aimée Craft; Katherine Fierlbeck; Jeffery Hewitt; Eleonore Fournier-Tombs; Patrick Fafard; Steven J. Hoffman; Adam R. Houston; David Robitaille; Carissima Mathen; Kaitlin Schwan; Jeremy de Beer; Kwame McKenzie; Jamie Chai Yun Liew; Martine Lagacé; Jeffrey Simpson; Alexandra Flynn; Marie-France Fortin; Louise Bélanger-Hardy; Kumanan Wilson; Teresa Scassa; Adelina Iftene; Anne Levesque; Vardit Ravitsky; Y. Y. Brandon Chen; Terry Skolnik; Ivy Bourgeault; Delphine Nakache & Jason W. Nickerson
"The pandemic is not a natural disaster or an “act of God.” The effects of COVID-19 are the result of choices: to tax and spend in ways that benefit some and disadvantage others; to intervene or not intervene in the economy when market forces prevent individuals from meeting basic needs; to regulate in particular ways; to view health as the product of a combination of luck and personal choices rather than the product of colliding social, economic, and political factors; and to adopt particular foreign policies toward international cooperation, including foreign aid."

Pathways of Reconciliation

Pathways of Reconciliation
