Celebrating Pink Shirt Day: Promoting acts of courage 

Celebrating Pink Shirt Day: Promoting acts of courage 

The following remarks were delivered at the annual Vice-President, Finance and Operations Pink Shirt Day event held on February 28, 2024.

Good morning, everyone. 

My name is Arig al Shaibah (she/her), and I oversee the Equity & Inclusion Office with team members on both Vancouver and Okanagan campuses. 

I am grateful for the generosity of the xwməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), Stó:lō and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil- Waututh) and Syilx (Okanagan) Peoples on whose traditional, ancestral and unceded territories we have the privilege to live and work. 

Thank you for inviting me to make remarks on this national Pink Shirt Day, which gives us an opportunity to pause to reinforce our value for inclusion and our commitment to preventing and addressing bullying and harassment in our communities and our workplaces.  

There are many types of bullying and harassment – physical, verbal, sexual, social, and cyber bullying or harassment.

All of these forms contravene UBC’s Respectful Environment Statement, and some may contravene our Discrimination Policy if the behaviour denies opportunities to or unfairly treats individuals or groups on the basis of one or more protected characteristic, such as race, colour, ancestry, place of origin, religion, marital status, family status, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, age, and political belief for example. 

Bullying and harassment create a hostile or intimidating environment. 

We all have a responsibility to check our own behaviour, and we are invited to seek out help or consult if we are experiencing or have witnessed this kind of behaviour. 

However, I do want to take a moment to talk about the role of leaders in modeling and fostering respectful behaviour. 

This year’s theme is Acts of Courage. 

According to a study conducted by Deloitte – a consulting firm –  courage is one of six core qualities of inclusive leadership.

If we are to succeed in preventing and addressing bullying and harassment at UBC, these six qualities are so important to cultivate in all of us, and especially in leaders:

  • The first quality is Commitment – a commitment to inclusion because it aligns with our personal values and because we know inclusion enriches our community and organizational health and success;
  • The second is Curiosity, that comes with empathy an openness to different and divergent perspectives; 
  • The third is Cognizance, or awareness of personal biases so that we can ensure we are making fair, transparent, consistent, and equitable decisions;
  • The fourth is Cultural Intelligence, which grows with a drive to learn about different cultures and to become more capable of engaging across diverse communities;
  • The fifth is Collaboration, to empower others so that they feel comfortable to use their voice and contribute in teams; and
  • The sixth is Courage – the courage to speak up and challenge the status quo and to have the humility to acknowledge the limitations of our own experiences, knowledge, or skills.

A respectful climate requires all individuals to develop these inclusive qualities and to regulate their behaviour but, more importantly, it requires leaders to work hard to shift the culture by disincentivizing bullying and harassing as well as discriminatory behaviour. 

These are difficult and emotionally fraught times, when individual behaviours and organizational culture profoundly matter to student, faculty, and staff success as well as to the university’s vibrancy and vitality.

Courage invites us contribute to “brave spaces” – to foster constructive engagement and dialogue across difference.

I know that during these times we can feel at a loss for whether and how to respond, and I want to reinforce that we will always do better in these situations if we focus on the six qualities I mentioned, and if we insist on showing care and compassion for each other.

I hope today serves to strengthen our collective efforts to create the kind of respectful, inclusive, safe and brave campus environment we all deserve. 

Thank you!

Arig al Shabiah, (she/her)
Associate Vice-President, Equity and Inclusion

Kara Ellison

Human Rights Advisor

Campus: UBC Okanagan

Pronouns: she, her, hers

Bio

Kara provides impartial human rights advice and information to all members of the UBC community.

Prior to joining the EIO, Kara was a litigator in private practice, practicing primarily in the areas of employment, human rights, and labour law. She obtained her J.D. from the University of Victoria, and obtained her Bachelor of Business Administration from Thompson Rivers University.

Kara’s education and experience has given her a thorough understanding of human rights law and policy. In applying this knowledge to her role with the UBC Equity & Inclusion Office, Kara strives to bring a balance of compassion, creativity, and practicality to her work. Kara hopes to foster a more equitable and inclusive society by improving access to, and understanding of, legal rights and obligations.

Emailkara.ellison@ubc.ca

Address:

Admin 100C 
1138 Alumni Avenue
Kelowna, BC 
V1V 1V7

Black History Month 2024

National Day of Remembrance of the Quebec City Mosque Attack and Action Against Islamophobia

International Holocaust Remembrance Day

Navigating Human Rights and Expression Rights with an Ethic of Care

Dr. Arig al Shaibah, Associate Vice-President, Equity & Inclusion

The Equity & Inclusion Office (EIO) joins students, faculty, and staff in expressing care and concern for those experiencing and/or witnessing immeasurable loss and grief as a consequence of the Israel-Palestine conflict and ongoing war.

Through this ongoing difficult time, the EIO continues to provide confidential advising and community capacity building to promote safety, dignity and equity in learning and working environments.

This discussion document has been issued by EIO to provide guidance to the UBC community1 in the following areas:

  1. reporting and addressing discrimination, bullying and harassment – with a discussion of antisemitism and Islamophobic, as well as ‘hate speech’; 
  2. understanding obligations and limits of freedom of expression and academic freedom, and
  3. fostering critical and constructive dialogue across difference.

1 To the extent there is any difference on how issues are discussed in this document and UBC’s policies the UBC policies will govern. 

1.      Reporting and addressing discrimination, bullying and harassment

UBC’s commitment and responsibility to provide an environment that is free of discrimination, as well as harmful behaviours such as bullying and harassment, are set out in the university’s Discrimination Policy,  Respectful Environment Statement, and Student Code of Conduct.

  • Contact Campus Security or the Student Conduct Office to report concerns of conduct violating the Student Code of Conduct.

Antisemitism, Islamophobia and ‘Hate Speech’

*Content Warning: The section below describes some harmful stereotypical tropes that could constitute forms of discrimination under human rights law.

Antisemitism and Islamophobia are specific examples of discrimination. The EIO has a particular role to play when it comes to the prevention and timely response to concerns of discrimination. When the EIO receives concerns or complaints of antisemitism and/or Islamophobic discrimination, we are guided by what the human rights case law says constitutes these forms of discrimination. The EIO takes every report of antisemitism, anti-Jewish racism, Islamophobia, anti-Muslim, anti-Arab racism and other forms of discrimination seriously, and we respond accordingly, commensurate with the nature of the incidents, in compliance with UBC policies and relevant laws. It is important to note that, with both antisemitism and Islamophobia, a common tactic is to assign collective guilt and blame to all members of the religion, “race”, and/or ethnicity when individuals or sub-groups (including state or non-state actors) commit objectionable or heinous acts (OHRC, 2015, p.17)1. This tactic might amount to discrimination whereas criticizing a state or government regime might not.

UBC’s Discrimination Policy (SC7) states that the prohibited grounds under this Policy will be interpreted in the same way as they are interpreted by the BC Human Rights Tribunal.

(i) Antisemitism:

According to the BC Human Rights Tribunal and BC courts, harmful stereotypical tropes about Jewish peoples may constitute discrimination – such as presumed links to conspiracies, control of the media, control of money, characteristics of dishonesty, deception, and disloyalty. The Tribunal and Courts have also been very clear that denying or minimizing the occurrence or impact of the Holocaust, linking the behaviour of Jewish people with Nazis, and/or celebrating and promoting Hitler and Nazi regimes, including related symbols and artefacts, are discriminatory acts.

(ii) Islamophobia:

According to the BC Human Rights Tribunal and BC courts stereotypical tropes, acts of hostility, racial profiling, greater scrutiny or security surveillance directed at Muslim peoples or those perceived to be Muslim may constitute discrimination. As well, comments and conduct that broadly view the Islamic religion and traditions as well as cultures of Muslim peoples as “barbaric” or inherently threatening are discriminatory. It is notable that some experts prefer to use the term anti-Muslim discrimination to distinguish it from lawful critiques of Islam, among critiques of other organized religions.

(iii) ‘Hate Speech’

‘Hate speech’ is a colloquial term that is generally used to describe speech that might violate the various laws that govern certain types of hateful or derogatory speech or public displays. For example the Criminal Code of Canada has laws against the “Wilful Promotion of Hatred” and the BC Human Rights Code has provisions against “Discriminatory Publications”. Other provisions in these statutes might govern ‘hate speech’ as well. Allegations of ‘hate speech’ are addressed at UBC using its own policies such as the Student Code of Conduct or the Discrimination Policy. The following website contains some helpful information about what constitutes ‘hate speech’ according to the Human Rights Code and the Human Rights Tribunal and also discusses the Criminal Code provisions: https://bchumanrights.ca/hate-speech-qa/.

Allegations of discrimination require careful analysis as there is a difference between, on the one hand, the legitimate criticism of states or governments or their actors, and on the other hand, comments and conduct that promote discriminatory tropes targeting a religion, culture, or peoples. Many factors need to be analyzed in each case, including evidence that there is a connection or nexus between the negative treatment experienced and at least one of the Code protected grounds or characteristics.

However, as a general practice, members of the UBC community should avoid and reject rhetoric that is or may activate discriminatory stereotypical tropes about religious, racial, and/or ethnic groups or that makes broad assumptions and/or targets particular groups based on their group identities or personal ideologies. While some conduct or comment may not rise to the legal definition of inciting hatred or discrimination, that behaviour may still be hurtful and not in keeping with UBC’s commitment to respect, inclusion, and safety for all. 

Click here to review UBC’s Discrimination Complaint Process.

2.      Understanding obligations and limits to freedom of expression and academic freedom

Freedom of expression is a foundational right in a free and open society and should, therefore, be strongly protected. Academic freedom is also a fundamental right unique to the academy, permitting members of the university and invitees to teach, learn, and consider a wide range of opinions without interference from the university administration and others.   

Neither freedom of expression nor academic freedom are limitless. For example, speech can be limited if found to rise to the level of inciting hatred or discrimination, as set out by the Criminal Code and human rights laws. It may also constitute defamation or a violation of copyright law. However, impassioned expression does not necessarily equate to illegality.  

The following four strategies may be used by instructors/educators to protect academic freedom and promote curiosity and inclusivity in educational environments (Manning, 2018)2:

  • Foster an educational space that invites divergent viewpoints on contentious subjects, while facilitating respectful and non-discriminatory engagement with ideas. To support such approaches, we encourage instructors to enrol in a workshop on facilitating conversations across difference (Contact the EIO, for form information). 
  • Examine and invite examination of personal assumptions about and intolerance towards differing cultural and political perspectives and experiences. 
  • Introduce material and commentary that is germane to the subject of instruction, which is academically and/or pedagogically relevant and rigorous. 
  • Be mindful that academic topics and education methods of instruction do not move towards “indoctrination” of opinions and ideologies. Be cautious of claims of “facts”, and allow for counter arguments.

2 Organizational Theory in Higher Education, Kathleen Manning, Routledge, 2018.

Academic freedom not only includes the subject matter of research and courses, but also instructional style. As a result, instructors can teach subjects – in accordance with their expertise and the course topic they have been assigned – using methods and procedures they find aligns with educational goals.  This may include adding topics of discussion given current affairs. Of course, topics should not be discussed in ways that are hateful or discriminatory as described above. Moreover, academic freedom may allow instructors to weave in a diversity of teaching and learning pedagogies where the matter relates to their course topic. With respect to syllabus changes, Senate Policy V-130 suggests that where there is a “material change” to the syllabus, students should be given an opportunity to discuss the changes with the instructor if they perceive any potential impacts on their progress.

For more information, visit UBC’s online resources on academic freedom

3.      Fostering Critical and Constructive Dialogue Across Difference

The EIO is guided by human rights and social justice frameworks that not only call for timely and trauma-informed responses to reports of discrimination in accordance with UBC policies, but also call for proactive campus-wide prevention and education efforts to foster dialogue across difference. Skillful dialogue across difference has the potential to support critical and constructive engagement on social justice topics between and among social groups who may perceive and/or experience incompatible or irreconcilable values or goals. 

For maintaining respectful relations while maximizing learning within the conversation, Özlem Sensoy and Robin DiAngelo (2017, p. 4)3 offer the following guidelines:

  • Strive for intellectual [and emotional] humility.
  • Recognize the difference between opinions and informed knowledge.
  • Let go of personal anecdotal evidence and look at broader societal patterns.
  • Notice your own defensive reactions and attempt to use these reactions as entry points for gaining deeper self-knowledge.
  • Recognize how your own social positionality (such as your race, class, gender, sexuality, ability-status) informs your perspectives and reactions to your subjects and to the individuals whose work you study in the course.

3 Sensoy, Ö. & D’Angelo, R. (2017). Is everyone really equal? 2nd ed. Teachers College, Columbia University.

Please note that consideration of individuals’ relationships with the war is important when determining whether and how to approach interpersonal or intergroup conversations. 

Explore the following additional guides and tools:

Relevant EIO Contacts

The EIO’s Equity Strategists are available to support intragroup discussion and listening sessions as well as to provide advice about or help facilitate intergroup dialogue across difference. Please complete the online Form to Request a Consultation or email info@equity.ubc.ca.

The EIO’s Human Rights Advisors are available to provide confidential, impartial, and accessible consultation, information, and referrals for concerns about discrimination. Please complete the online Form to Request Advising or email humanrights@equity.ubc.ca (UBCV) or humanrights.ubco@equity.ubc.ca (UBCO).


 

National Day of Remembrance of the Quebec City Mosque Attack and Action Against Islamophobia

January 29 has been designated by the Canadian government as the National Day of Remembrance of the Quebec City Mosque Attack and Action Against Islamophobia – an opportunity to honour the survivors and victims of a violent hate-motivated attack on Muslim worshipers at the Islamic Cultural Centre in Sainte-Foy, Quebec in 2017. It is also a day to commit to ongoing efforts to combat Islamophobia in all of its manifestations from biased and bigoted attitudes, to individual and systemic acts of discrimination, to hate-motivated violence.  

Sadly, Islamophobic hate crimes in Canada are on the rise, along with other forms of bias motivated hate crimes. In 2021, police-reported hate crimes in Canada demonstrated a rise in hate crimes motivated by race or ethnicity as well as by religion. While Islamophobia represented 4 per cent of all reports, it increased by a staggering 71 per cent over the previous year. And, because the Muslim Ummah (community) is ethno-racially and globally diverse, Islamophobia often manifests in intersecting ways with other forms of race or ethnicity based hate, and particularly with anti-Black, anti-Arab, and/or anti-Asian racism. Anti-Black hate crimes represented the greatest proportion of hate crimes reported, at 19 per cent, while hate crimes targeting Arab/West Asian and South Asian people represented 5 per cent and 5 per cent of all reports, and increased by 46 per cent and 21 per cent, respectively.

Join UBC students, faculty, and staff to honour the survivors and victims of the Quebec attack and other violence targeting Muslims, to learn more about Islamophobia and intersecting forms of racism, and to personally commit to combating hate in all of its forms. Click here for more information.

While hate speech and bias motived violence are criminal offenses in Canada and should be reported to the police, bias motivated discrimination contravenes UBC’s Discrimination Policy, which is guided by the BC Human Rights Code. For more information about how to report hate, Islamophobia and other forms of discrimination on campus, view the UBC Discrimination Complaint Process found on the Human Rights Advising page.

Arig al Shaibah, PhD 

Associate Vice-President, Equity and Inclusion

International Holocaust Remembrance Day

On January 27, UBC community members are encouraged to pause to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day, designated by the United Nations to honour the memory of six million people of Jewish identity and millions of others who were killed through the genocidal regime of Nazi Germany, including those targeted based on their ability, ethnicity, religious and political beliefs, and/or sexual orientation (for example, people with disabilities, 2SLGTBQIA+ people, Roma, Black people, Slavic people and Jehova’s witnesses). It is also a day to recognize and resist the racial and religious bias, stereotypes, and intolerance that historically enabled human atrocities against Jewish peoples and which persist to this day. According to Statistics Canada, anti-Semitic hate crimes represented 15 per cent of the 2021 police-reported hate crimes in Canada, and they increased by 47 per cent over the previous year. In the aftermath of the Holocaust, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was established as an aspirational international humanitarian effort to promote universal human rights.

Join UBC students, faculty, and staff in learning more about the importance of preserving Holocaust remembrance and combatting antisemitism, and to reflect on our individual and collective responsibilities to safeguard human rights locally and globally. Click here for more information.

While hate speech and bias motived violence are criminal offenses in Canada and should be reported to the police, bias motivated discrimination contravenes UBC’s Discrimination Policy, which is guided by the BC Human Rights Code. For more information about how to report hate, antisemitism and other forms of discrimination on campus, view the UBC Discrimination Complaint Process found on the Human Rights Advising page.

Arig al Shaibah, PhD 

Associate Vice-President, Equity and Inclusion

Update on the progress of strategic equity and anti-racism efforts

Launched in January 2023, UBC’s Strategic Equity and Anti-Racism (StEAR) Framework set out the university’s integrated approach to advancing equity and anti-racism commitments and priorities drawn from across a number of institutional plans. Now, a year since the launch of the framework, at the January 2023 townhall, a number of efforts have moved the implementation of this work forward.

In June 2023, the Equity & Inclusion Office expanded on the framework by developing and publishing a more detailed StEAR Roadmap for Change, setting out 18 objectives and 135 institutional-level strategic actions to be implemented over the next three to five years. 

In September 2023, the EIO launched an institution-wide assessment of the current status of each of the 135 strategic actions. In December 2023, the EIO also launched an institution-wide effort to compile an inventory of decentralized EDI practices and initiatives that advance more generally the goals and objectives of the StEAR framework. Completion of the inventory will be coordinated at Faculty and portfolio levels by an inventory contact designated by a Dean or Vice-President.

Results of these two initiatives will contribute to efforts to evaluate StEAR progress, support information sharing amongst UBC’s EDI champions, and will inform the inaugural StEAR progress report to be published in June 2024. The inventory of decentralized practices will also be published in an online database.

To learn more about the progress of institutional-level actions, join the upcoming StEAR Roadmap for Change update: Reporting on equity and anti-racism progress townhall:

Recognizing the importance of community engagement and involvement in advancing the StEAR roadmap, the Office of the Vice-President for Students and the EIO collaborated to launch a $300,000 StEAR Enhancement Fund to support projects that seek to advance racial equity, disability equity and/or equity in relation to sexual and gender identity (with consideration of intersectionality). Since the fund was launched in September 2023, 78 applications have been received. A public update on applications received and funded will be shared in mid-January 2024. Applications continue to accepted at any time and are assessed on a rolling basis until August 2024, or until funds are depleted.

To support decentralized efforts and accountability, a governance model for StEAR implementation has now been confirmed and efforts are underway to stand-up various groups and elements of the model. This includes decentralized leadership roles – Equity Leads – in each Faculty and portfolio and efforts to strengthen communication and engagement channels with community-led groups and committees. Additional efforts included updates to the EDI Action Network, now with some 240 members, and the suite of planning and evaluation guides, tools and templates – both vital resources designed to support UBC community members working to incorporate EDI into their strategic planning, priority initiatives, and systems and structures.

Inas Ettayebi

Strategist, Institutional Initiatives

Campus: UBC Vancouver

Pronouns: she, her, hers

Bio

Inas’ academic journey encompasses a BA in Political Science, an MA in International Political Economy, and an MBA with a specialization in strategy development. Inas excels at blending smart planning skills with a strong understanding of how to deliver services effectively. Her professional path showcases her adeptness at transforming overarching objectives into actionable, growth-driven strategies that enhance operational efficiency. Inas has also spearheaded training sessions and workshops aimed at strengthening inclusive workplace cultures, partnering with leadership to introduce educational resources and programs that cultivate an environment of inclusivity among staff.

Email:
inas.ettayebi@ubc.ca

Address:
Brock Commons South Building
6180 Walter Gage Road
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1