Robyn Bourgeois is a mixed-race Cree activist, academic, author, and educator.[1] She currently resides in Haudenosaunee, Anishinabe, and Huron-Wendat territory in Canada.[1]
Education
Bourgeois received her Bachelor's Degree in Sociology in 2002 from Okanagan University College. She then, studied at UBC-Okanangan, where she received her Master's Degree in Sociology in 2004. She received her Doctorate of Social Justice Education from the University of Toronto in 2014. While studying at UBC-Okanaagan, Bourgeois became involved with activism relating to missing and murdered indigenous women and human trafficking.[2]
In 2014, Bourgeois was critical of the RCMP's National Operational Review on missing and murdered Indigenous women in Canada, arguing that it misses a number of issues including colonialism, racism, and police accountability as causes of the violence epidemic affecting Indigenous women and girls.[4]
In October 2018, Bourgeois testified for the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls,[5] which was established in September 2016 by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. The National Inquiry looks into potential causes of violence against Indigenous women and girls in Canada.[6] Bourgeois has criticized government inquiries in the past, stating that the initiative allows “the Canadian state to appear that it is doing something without ever having to actually do anything,”[7] but decided to contribute in order to “speak for other trafficked and exploited women." During her talk, she discussed her own experience as a sexual assault survivor[8] and the impact of settler colonialism on people's perception of Indigenous women. Bourgeois cited Disney's Pocahontas and Peter Pan's Tiger Lilly as examples, with each showcasing Indigenous women as sexual object that are prone to settler violence.[5]
In 2019, Robyn Bourgeois was featured in the documentary, Daughters, directed by Riayn Spaero. The film discusses sex trafficking, murder, and sex assault facing Indigenous women in the United States and Canada.[9]
In April 2020, Bourgeois published an online article entitled: Let’s call the Nova Scotia mass shooting what it is: White male terrorism".[10] In it, she alleges that mass murders are not due to mental defects, but the result of perpetrators being "white" and "male".
In October 2020, Dr. Bourgeois was appointed acting vice-provost, Indigenous engagement for Brock University.
Publications
Deceptive Inclusion: The 2010 Vancouver Olympic, 2009
Warrior Women, 2014
Huffington Post Blog on RCMP Report, 2014
Colonial Exploitation, 2015
Indigenous Women’s Writing and the Cultural Study of Law, 2018