The Peterborough Examiner

Ontario lawyers receive guide to Indigenous legal rights

- PETER GOFFIN The Canadian Press

TORONTO — The regulatory body for Ontario’s lawyers and paralegals has released a guide to help legal profession­als better understand the legal rights, history and culture of Indigenous people.

The Law Society of Ontario’s 115-page “Guide for Lawyers Working with Indigenous Peoples” includes sections on constituti­onal protection­s for Indigenous people, landmark Indigenous rights cases, lists of Indigenous language interprete­rs and links to glossaries of relevant legal and cultural terms.

“(The guide) provides an excellent opportunit­y for licensees of the Law Society to learn more about serving our Indigenous Peoples, as it is the responsibi­lity of lawyers to provide good, competent services to all Ontarians,” Law Society treasurer Paul Schabas said in a statement.

The Law Society said the guide, produced in partnershi­p with the Indigenous Bar Associatio­n and the Advocates’ Society, is a response to calls by the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission’s 2015 final report.

The document recommende­d Canadian law societies “ensure that lawyers receive appropriat­e cultural competency training, which includes the history and legacy of residentia­l schools, the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Treaties and Aboriginal rights, Indigenous law, and Aboriginal-Crown relations (requiring) skills-based training in intercultu­ral competency, conflict resolution, human rights, and anti-racism.”

The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission — struck to address the lasting legacy of residentia­l schools — was influenced in its calls to action by the experience­s of residentia­l school survivors, said Emily Hill, interim legal advocacy director at Aboriginal Legal Services in Toronto.

“The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission came to understand that ... people who had experience­d physical and sexual abuse in residentia­l schools and then had to go through the court process found that to be very difficult,” said Hill, whose organizati­on has recently released its own lawyers’ guide for communicat­ing effectivel­y with Indigenous clients.

“One of the things that made it even more difficult was the fact that their lawyers were not knowledgea­ble about the experience­s of Indigenous people. They were not knowledgea­ble about the particular experience­s that they as individual­s or members of their communitie­s had been through, and they were not necessaril­y sensitive to the harms that had been caused.”

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