AV俱乐部

 

Making a difference in the legal profession, one grad at a time

Dal鈥檚 Indigenous Blacks & Mi鈥檏maq initiative marks 30 years of impact

- December 18, 2019

Michelle Williams, director of the Indigenous Blacks & Mi'kmaq Initiative, Schulich School of Law. (Danny Abriel photo)
Michelle Williams, director of the Indigenous Blacks & Mi'kmaq Initiative, Schulich School of Law. (Danny Abriel photo)

Since its launch 30 years ago, AV俱乐部鈥檚 Indigenous Blacks and Mi鈥檏maq (IB&M) Initiative has seen more than 200 of its graduates go on to pursue careers in all areas of the legal profession from private practice to the upper echelons of the Nova Scotia judiciary.

That鈥檚 a far cry from how the legal community in the province looked in 1989, when the federal government鈥檚 Marshall Commission and Dal-led Breaking Barriers reports both called for measures to increase representation of African Nova Scotians and Mi鈥檏maq in the justice system. At that time, there were just a few dozen practicing Black lawyers in Nova Scotia and a single Mi鈥檏maw graduate of Dal鈥檚 law school.

Dal answered the calls to boost representation by putting further support into the law school-run IB&M initiative, then in its early days. With its mix of funding, academic supports and community connections, the program is still one of the only of its kind at a law school in Canada.

鈥淚 think you鈥檇 be hard pressed to find another initiative quite like this,鈥 says Schulich School of Law faculty member Michelle Williams, who has been IB&M鈥檚 executive director since 2004 鈥攈alf the program鈥檚 existence. 鈥淚 think we鈥檝e seen really great success across the legal profession and on broader justice issues as a result."

Marking a milestone


Prof. Williams had a chance to spread the word about some of those successes for a national audience this fall at a 30th milestone event during the Canadian Association of Black Lawyers conference in Halifax in mid-October. Attendees at the conference, alumni and others from the community were invited to the law school for the day as part of the gathering to learn more about IB&M alumni and some of the work they鈥檝e done across a range of fields to help further reduce discrimination in the legal system.

And later in October, a roundtable event held at the Mi鈥檏maq Native Friendship Centre helped introduce Mi鈥檏maw youth, prospective law students, and current law students to some of those IB&M alumni and inform them about how the initiative helps formalize connections between students and the ongoing work on the ground through things like internships, part-time work, summer articling, and more. 聽

鈥淭hat was a really great opportunity to have everyone come together at the various stages in their legal careers,鈥 says Prof. Williams. 鈥淧erhaps most exciting was to have potential law students there being able to see themselves in the students and alumni and hope that they鈥檒l join us at some point.鈥

Prof. Williams mentions the work alumni Chief Paul Prosper of Paqtnkek First Nation and Millbrook鈥檚 Heather McNeill Q.C., a long-time lawyer with AV俱乐部 Legal Aid, have done to help advance changes in Mi鈥檏maq and Indigenous governance over child welfare as one example of this broader impact. IB&M students have been actively involved in the project, one even serving as a youth project coordinator while still a student.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a nice ability to link research that鈥檚 happening by students or opportunities for them to do internships with our alumni and, for example, First Nations organizations to further the work in substantive areas that are of concern to our community,鈥 she says.

Nurturing ambition


Up to 12 students enter law school at Dal each year with funding through IB&M, many with what Prof. Williams calls a 鈥渢hirst for justice in the broadest sense.鈥 She says the IB&M family is there to help nurture those ambitions.

Today, as the initiative moves ahead, it does so with greater Indigenous Black and Mi鈥檏maq representation in the legal community than ever. There are now 64 Mi鈥檏maq or Aboriginal members of the Nova Scotia Barristers Society and 79 who are African Nova Scotian or Black. An alum, Angelina Amaral, chairs the society鈥檚 Truth and Reconciliation Committee and others hold similar positions within the organization and in other areas across the legal system.

As Prof. Williams looks to IB&M鈥檚 future, she does emboldened by the initiative鈥檚 past successes. 聽

鈥淲hen you have those conditions that enable the elements, particularly the people, to come together, I think that鈥檚 where the magic happens.鈥