Jan. 29, 2020
Unpacking intersectionality and sexual violence in a complicated country
Twenty-year-old Amber Tuccaro from Mikisew Cree First Nation was last seen on Aug. 18, 2010, in Nisku, Alta. Two years later, horseback riders found her remains in the same area. In 2012, the police released a recording of a phone conversation Amber had with an unidentified male, hoping it would help identify a suspect. A few women came forward claiming to know the man's identity, all identifying the same person, but RCMP say he is not a person of interest. In March 2014, Amber鈥檚 mother filed a complaint against the Leduc RCMP saying they downplayed her disappearance, including taking her off the missing persons list after one month, despite no one seeing her.
Amber鈥檚 story is just one of over 300 that have recently been documented in of unsolved cases missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada from the 1950s onward (screenshot pictured above). Sixty of them are from here in Alberta. Cases like Amber鈥檚 tell a very real story about the complex cultural impact of intersectionality 鈥 a topic that is sure to be discussed at length during Diversity Days, running this week at U荔枝视频.
The compounding effect of intersectionality
Coined by civil rights activist back in the 1980s, intersectionality is the theory of how overlapping or intersecting social identities, particularly minority identities, relate to systems and structures of oppression, domination, or discrimination.
And it is widely known that those who are affected by intersectionality face an increased risk of experiencing violence. The eye-opening results of the , released in June 2019, tells us that the rate of homicide for Indigenous women is almost seven times higher than other women. And while there has been a decrease in female homicides in Canada over the past 35 years, there has been a 24 per cent increase in Indigenous female homicides.
Sexual violence is about power and control.
- Carla Bertsch
鈥淥ur culture has hierarchies that pit people against each other, privileging some while devaluing others, making us believe that some people are more or less worthy than others," says Carla Bertsch, U荔枝视频鈥檚 sexual violence support advocate. "For example, a white woman faces more risk than a white male to come into contact with sexual violence. But if we look at women of colour or, specifically, Indigenous women, they experience even higher rates of sexual violence and homicide. The same is true for trans women 鈥 there is a compounding effect of identities.鈥
Stories like Amber鈥檚 are all too familiar to Keeta Gladue, the Indigenous student adviser and team lead at U荔枝视频鈥檚 Writing Symbols Lodge. In her work with students and on campus, she encounters discrimination that comes with intersectionality on a regular basis.
Gladue explains that our identities are not self-contained. They are relationships between people and history, people and communities, people and institutions. 鈥淲hen society paints bull鈥檚 eyes on the backs of people鈥檚 identities, it isn't that someone is physically more prone to discrimination,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t's not a physiological weakness 鈥 it's a cultural one. Society chooses where and how they place attention on people and their identities.鈥
鈥淲e need to work to understand how a moment today was created through a history before us and be able to bring that into our understanding today,鈥 echoes Bertsch.
If we can鈥檛 see a problem, we can鈥檛 fix a problem
Here on campus, we have work to do. The inequity that comes from intersectionality requires a commitment to from all of us to understand what equality within systems and institutional structures needs to look like.
鈥淲hen an Indigenous woman asks a professor for something, versus a white woman, versus a white male 鈥 how, because of intersectionality, is the same request being heard, and in turn, supported?鈥 poses Bertsch. 鈥淚 think it is really important to highlight that it鈥檚 not just an increased vulnerability to risk and violence, but also decreased access to support and services required to heal and thrive. We can see the compounding effects of intersectionality in a variety of ways when folks occupy different and multiple identities.鈥
For Gladue, our institution must be willing to bear witness to often-painful realities and to make space to listen and learn. 鈥淭he university is open to all people, but it's not ready for all people,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 believe that there are so many students, staff and faculty working towards an institution where anyone can walk through the door, but particularly in trauma, and specifically with sexualized violence, it鈥檚 very complicated and it takes a great deal of resources. I don't just mean money, I mean knowledge; I mean people who can understand policies and create good structures. It takes time, and infrastructure, and ceremony.鈥
To tackle some of the difficult realities of Canada鈥檚 missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, as well as the widespread discrimination that comes with intersectionality both on and off campus, Gladue will be co-presenting a talk this Thursday called 鈥 part of Diversity Days, running Jan. 28 to 30. She, and international student adviser Garrett Beatty will unpack some of the myths of multiculturalism, acceptance and unity in our country. The event is free and open to all.
U荔枝视频鈥檚 Sexual Violence Policy aims to lead the institution in taking a stand against gender-based violence in all its forms. The sexual violence support team advocates for victim rights, accommodations and referrals, and can connect you to resources, counselling and reporting options. If you think you have experienced sexual violence, or know someone who has, visit the鈥. You can also arrange a consultation with the university鈥檚 sexual violence support team by confidential鈥email.