New Books at the Law Library – 25/06/03

LAW LIBRARY level 3: HV9960.C2 P47 2023
B. Perrin, Indictment: The Criminal Justice System on Trial (Aevo UTP, 2023).
Online access: https://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=13282054

LAW LIBRARY level 3: K1401 .C735 2017
K. Darling & A. Perzanowski, eds, Creativity Without Law: Challenging the Assumptions of Intellectual Property (New York University Press, 2017).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE1232 .W44 2025
C. Essert, J.W. Neyers, E.J. Weinrib, Tort Law: Cases and Materials, 6th ed (Emond Montgomery Publications, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE3663.E94 U57 2025
R. Coelho, K.S. Gaind & T. Lemmens, eds, Unravelling MAID in Canada: Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide As Medical Care (McGill-Queen's University Press, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KEQ451 .A32 2010
F. Ádám, A polgári jogi felelösség útjai vegyes jogrendszerben, Qúebec, Kanada (Elte Eötvös Kaido, 2010).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KRX1750 .A88 2022
R.A. Atuguba, The New Constitutional and Administrative Law of Ghana: From the Garden of Eden to 2022 (University of Ghana Printing Press, 2022).

Preserving the UBC Japanese Special Collection

Database Down – 20-seiki Media Jōhō Dētabēsu

The vendors at 20-seiki Media Jōhō Dētabēsu have let us know that the database is down and searching is not possible.

They are working to resolve but in the meantime have set up this workaround site that can be used:

New Books at Education Library: May & June 2025

Welcome to our May & June 2025 Booklist!
This special joint edition features over 50 newly arrived titles across a wide range of genres, including engaging picture books and young adult novels, as well as professional resources for educators, researchers, and those working in higher education.

  • Picture books and children’s literature highlighting themes of friendship, nature, culture, and community

  • Young adult novels exploring activism, identity, grief, and self-discovery

  • Professional and academic titles on teaching practice, qualitative research, higher education, and global learning

  • Memoirs and biographies that share personal journeys—from Holocaust survival to Indigenous activism and international experiences

  • Informative nonfiction covering climate change, ecosystems, water conservation, and more

Click on a book cover to preview the title on Google Books. Click on the title to check availability or place a hold through the UBC Library catalogue.

BF637.M56 M33 2021 Me and my sit spot / Lauren MacLean ; illustrated by Anna Panchuk.

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HV1431 .O35 2024 Road home / Rex Ogle.

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PZ7.G65435 Tr 2024 Trajectory / Cambria Gordon.

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PZ7.1.E274 Fl 2024 The Flicker / H.E. Edgmon.

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PZ7.1.C6334 Lo 2024 Looking for smoke / K.A. Cobell.

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PZ7.1.F5347 Ri 2024 Rise / Freya Finch.

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PZ7.1.K58384 Fr 2024 A friend for Eddy / Ann Kim Ha.

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PZ7.1.Y365 Pri 2022 Private label / Kelly Yang.

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PZ7.1.W3645 Su 2024 Summer at Squee / Andrea Wang.

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Indigenous Stories of the Klondike Gold Rush: Part 1 – The Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in

In last month’s blog post, we took you on an introductory tour of the realities of the Klondike Gold Rush era alongside the Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush Collection. We continue this tour with Part 1 of a two-part series about Indigenous stories of the Klondike Gold Rush, namely that of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in people.

In Part 1, we identify the Indigenous people central to the Gold Rush’s discovery narrative. We also explore the history of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in people, and the crucial role they played during the Klondike Gold Rush era.

Portraits of Indigenous people (nations unknown; between 1897 and 1924)

A note on historical photographs of Indigenous people

It is difficult to ascertain the context or intent behind the photographs of Indigenous people in the Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush Collection. 19th and 20th century settler photography of Indigenous people was sometimes shot under exploitative circumstances, or misidentified its subjects. However, many photographs from this time were produced with full control and consent from their Indigenous subjects.

For more information, refer to Looks Can Be Deceiving: Issues Regarding 19th-Century Native American Photographs, which guided the above statement.

Indigenous people, who have inhabited the land now known as the Yukon Territory for millennia, have long been excluded from Gold Rush narratives. While photographs of Indigenous people in this collection may have been produced from a colonial or voyeuristic perspective, they are visual evidence of the presence and impact of Indigenous people during the Klondike Gold Rush era. These photos have been included in this post as a means of revising Eurocentric Gold Rush narratives that invisibilize both the labour and the existence of Indigenous communities during this period.

A note on outdated language in the Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush Collection

Outdated terms for Indigenous people exist in this collection, and are present in two photographs in this post. Inclusion of these materials is not an endorsement of this language. In addition to the above noted purpose, these documents also preserve “historical evidence of social conditions and attitudes” of the era.

These photos are intended to be viewed through a critical lens, keeping in mind their historical context.

Indigenous Icons of the Gold Rush

For decades after its end, the lore of the Klondike Gold Rush primarily credited George Cormack, a white settler, with spotting the first traces of gold in the Yukon River. While it was often noted that Tagish men Skookum Jim (Keish) and Tagish Charlie (K̲áa Goox̱) were by his side, cultural representations portrayed them as just that: sidekicks.

A group of white prospectors pan for gold in the Klondike (1899)

It is now understood that it was just as likely that Skookum Jim, Tagish Charlie, or Cormack’s wife, a Tagish woman named Kate (Shaaw Tláa) had first made the fateful discovery, but that Cormack had registered the official claim because he was white.

While decades of retellings of the Klondike Gold Rush era have centered the stories of white prospectors, the Indigenous communities of the Yukon not only played a pivotal role in the Klondike Gold Rush, but were also profoundly affected by the mass migration.

A group of Indigenous boys and men stand in front of a tent (1908)

History of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in

The Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in people, or the People of the Hammer-Rock River, are descendants of the Hän, who have inhabited the Yukon Territory for thousands of years. For centuries, the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in traversed their territory as the seasons shifted, gathering berries in the fall and hunting in the winters.

Photos in the Phil Lind Collection show the vastness of the Yukon River, where the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in spent summers fishing for salmon.

“Telephoto view down Yukon from Dawson” (between 1895 and 1900)

Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in Territory

The territory of Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in people extends from the Yukon River valley through to the Blackstone Uplands.

The Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush Collection features many photos of the landscape surrounding the Yukon River, where the traditional Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in territory is located.

Postcard depicting Forty Mile Town, a traditional harvest and hunting area for the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in (1898)

The “heart” of their territory is Tr’ochëk, the land between the Klondike and Yukon Rivers. The Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in fished, hunted, and held cultural events on this land for hundreds of years before the Gold Rush. In the late 1800s, stampeders would occupy this area, displacing the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in.

This photo from the Phil Lind Collection shows Tr’ochëk:

“Mouth of the Klondyke, showing lower town and Yukon River, Alaska” (1899)

Role of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in in the Gold Rush Era  

During the Klondike Gold Rush, the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in worked as hunters, porters, and traders, as well as on paddlewheelers, at building sites, and on claims.

A group of Indigenous men and boys rest on the Dyea trail (1897)

Their expertise was invaluable to prospectors who were unfamiliar with the territory, and their skills were often preferred over those of settlers. The meat supplied by Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in hunters was at some points crucial to the survival of Dawson City residents.

While they tried to coexist harmoniously with stampeders, the Gold Rush had dire social and environmental implications for the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in. Despite this, their culture and tradition has endured, and they remain a strong, self-governing nation to this day.

Stay tuned…

… for Part 2, where we delve into the impacts of the Klondike Gold Rush on the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in and explore the nation’s contemporary history. We also meet Chief Isaac, the revered chief of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in during the Klondike Gold Rush.

Congratulations, Grad Class of 2025!

Congratulations, Grad Class of 2025 Best wishes and good luck, From the Law Library Staff

New Books at the Law Library – 25/05/21

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE9275.A3281999 B67 2023 G. Botting, Canadian Extradition Law, 6th ed (LexisNexis Canada, 2023). LAW LIBRARY level 3: KPA4652 .K569 2024 Kim Yong-jin, Han Sang-jin, Pong Chi-uk, Apsu susaek 김 용진, 한 상진, 봉 지욱 , 압수 수색 (Sŏul-si : Nyusŭ T’ap’a, 2024). (서울시 : 뉴스 타파, 2024).

Lost access to UN Comtrade

Subscription access currently not working. Free access only. Eresources is investigating!

https://resources.library.ubc.ca/page.php?details=united-nations-commodity-trade-statistics-database&id=482

Open Access Article Publishing at UBC: Annual Report

Open Access Article Publishing at UBC: Annual Report

2023/2024

The Scholarly Communications and Copyright Office has released the 2023/24 Open Access Article Publishing at UBC Report. This report provides an overview of yearly open access (OA) article publishing trends at UBC and seeks to increase transparency around financial conditions for OA article publishing, and to highlight the impact of publisher negotiations on OA at UBC. For more information, or to share feedback please contact scholarly.communications@ubc.ca.

Mental Health Awareness Display in the Law Library