Skip to main content
Ontario Tech acknowledges the lands and people of the Mississaugas of Scugog Island First Nation.

We are thankful to be welcome on these lands in friendship. The lands we are situated on are covered by the Williams Treaties and are the traditional territory of the Mississaugas, a branch of the greater Anishinaabeg Nation, including Algonquin, Ojibway, Odawa and Pottawatomi. These lands remain home to many Indigenous nations and peoples.

We acknowledge this land out of respect for the Indigenous nations who have cared for Turtle Island, also called North America, from before the arrival of settler peoples until this day. Most importantly, we acknowledge that the history of these lands has been tainted by poor treatment and a lack of friendship with the First Nations who call them home.

This history is something we are all affected by because we are all treaty people in Canada. We all have a shared history to reflect on, and each of us is affected by this history in different ways. Our past defines our present, but if we move forward as friends and allies, then it does not have to define our future.

Learn more about Indigenous Education and Cultural Services

FSSH Professor quoted in The Atlantic

Dr. Gary Genosko, Professor, Communication, Faculty of Social Science and Humanities.
Dr. Gary Genosko, Professor, Communication, Faculty of Social Science and Humanities.

Dr. Gary Genosko, Professor, Communication, was recently quoted in the online edition of The Atlantic, a news magazine with a circulation of about 500,000 in the Washington, D.C. area.

In the article The Geology of Media, Dr. Genosko was introduced as a philosopher who has redrawn the ancient metaphysical map of the elements based on earth, air, fire and water, translating them into the current terms of dust particles, flammable fluids, toxic fogs and blood minerals. The article also included a link to a video of his original conference paper, The New Fundamental Elements of a Contested Planet