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RETURNING TO THE TERRITORY – Yukon University has named Dr. Ken Coates as the new chair of the Bachelor of Arts in Indigenous Governance program. Photo courtesy YUKON UNIVERSITY

YukonU welcomes Dr. Ken Coates as program chair

An accomplished Yukon scholar will be coming home this summer.

By Whitehorse Star on February 16, 2023

An accomplished Yukon scholar will be coming home this summer.

Yukon University has named Dr. Ken Coates as the new chair of the Bachelor of Arts in Indigenous Governance program, it was announced Thursday.

He will assume his duties on July 1.

Born in Banff, Alta., and raised in Whitehorse, Coates is a renowned and well-respected scholar, educator and commentator, the university said in a statement.

“He is passionate about the topics of Indigenous rights, northern development, northern Canadian history, science, technology and society.”

Coates has taught and led at universities across Canada, including the University of Waterloo, University of New Brunswick, University of Northern British Columbia and University of Saskatchewan.

He also spent two years at the University of Waikato in New Zealand, an institution known globally for its work on Indigenous education.

“It is an incredible honour to be able to join the faculty at Yukon University,” Coates said.

“Yukon First Nations and, indeed, the Yukon as a whole, have co-created one of the most imaginative and creative governance environments in the country.

“I look forward to the opportunity to work with students and colleagues at YukonU in supporting the realization of the dream of Indigenous re-empowerment and territory-wide reconciliation.”

Dr. Lesley Brown, the university’s president and vice-chancellor, said Coates “possesses an exemplary reputation as a scholar, teacher and academic leader.

“His experience and leadership will strengthen the Indigenous Governance degree program, and his understanding of Yukon’s history and his passion for the North will be a tremendous asset for our students and for Yukon University.”

Coates has a PhD in History from the University of British Columbia with a dissertation on Indigenous-newcomer relations in the Yukon.

He also holds a Master of Arts in History from the University of Manitoba with a thesis on the Yukon fur trade, and a Bachelor of Arts in History from UBC.

“We are thrilled Dr. Coates has chosen to return home to the Yukon and lead our Indigenous Governance degree program,”said Dr. Shelagh Rowles, the university’s provost and vice-president, Academic.

“He brings a wealth of scholarship and life-long experience engaging with issues of development and land claims in Canada’s North.”

Coates has a long connection with YukonU, and has championed the institution at every step of its evolution.

In the 1980s, he taught as a guest lecturer and in the next decade, contributed to the design and curriculum of the Northern Studies program.

In 1988, Coates founded The Northern Review alongside the late Aron Senkpiel, the then-dean of Arts and Science, and archeology instructor Norm Easton.

Published by YukonU’s School of Liberal Arts, the journal is the only peer-reviewed publication in Canada devoted exclusively to northern issues and published North of 60.

Coates remains one of three senior editors – 35 years later.

As well, he has written extensively on Indigenous history, Indigenous-newcomer relations and post-secondary education.

His first major work, Best Left as Indians, examined the history of the Yukon through the lens of Aboriginal-European contact.

His subsequent work includes The Marshall Decision and Aboriginal Rights in the Maritimes, and Land of the Midnight Sun: A History of the Yukon.

Coates holds the Canada Research Chair in Regional Innovation at the Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy, University of Saskatchewan.

He was named a Distinguished Fellow in Aboriginal and Northern Canadian Issues at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute in 2021 and was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2015.

Developed in partnership with the 14 Yukon First Nations, the Bachelor of Arts in Indigenous Governance (IGD) aims to build northern leadership capacity by providing students with the values, knowledge and skills to work collaboratively within the unique governance landscape of the North.

Since its launching in 2018, 80 students have enrolled in the program, a further 87 students have taken IGD courses, and there have been six graduates.

The program chair is responsible for teaching, setting the vision for the unit, recruiting and hiring faculty, supporting and guiding students, managing the program and its evolution, ensuring courses meet or exceed quality assurance standards, and working with First Nations stakeholders

Yukon University offers more than 40 degree, diploma, certificate and trades programs

Its 13 campuses are located on the traditional territories of the 14 Yukon First Nations.

Comments (9)

Up 18 Down 7

Nathan Living on Feb 17, 2023 at 5:48 pm

Very well qualified, he will do well here.

Up 26 Down 8

Apex Parasite on Feb 17, 2023 at 1:14 pm

@irony for tmyk

So you're saying the color of his skin should preclude him from educating anyone but those of the same skin color?

Up 19 Down 20

RealYukonerHere on Feb 17, 2023 at 12:46 pm

He thinks 10 years in the Yukon makes him a Yukoner - he is an opportunist wherever he goes...and #ETTD

Up 30 Down 13

John - with a J on Feb 17, 2023 at 11:43 am

Personally, I think I will give this person a chance before I crap all over him.

Up 16 Down 24

Lisa on Feb 17, 2023 at 9:29 am

He is hardly a Yukoner...

Up 13 Down 26

Peace be with you on Feb 17, 2023 at 8:19 am

Sure ken had contributed a bunch of respected research, but how many extremely well paid white folks does it take to run greendale? I swear YU exists to feed the middle to upper middle class lifestyles of the white people that work there. Meanwhile indigenous students burn through their funding trying to get past high school.

Up 51 Down 12

So true on Feb 16, 2023 at 3:49 pm

@TMYK

Spot on. And yeah, I’d take that bet. For like a dollar, as I bet it won’t be long before he’s in the high seat with a huge fat salary. But someone’s gotta get that place in order. It’s a disaster.

Up 47 Down 9

Yukon Skeptic on Feb 16, 2023 at 3:12 pm

Bets on long before he’s the President of YU. Any takers?

Up 69 Down 33

TMYK on Feb 16, 2023 at 12:43 pm

The irony of a white guy being the Yukon expert on indigenous peoples and teaching indigenous students how they should govern themselves is just amazing.

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