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Dr. Brian Thom

Associate professor, Provost’s engaged scholar

Anthropology

Accepting graduate students

Contact:
Office: Cornett B244
Credentials:
PhD (McGill)
Area of expertise:
Cultural anthropology, Indigenous legal orders and land rights, ethnographic mapping, space and place, Coast Salish

Bio

Dr. Brian Thom’s research investigates the critical intersections of Indigenous legal orders, governance, and land rights with colonial state power, focusing on the dynamics of knowledge, culture, and place. His award-winning, community-engaged scholarship, conducted in close collaboration with Indigenous communities in Coast Salish territories, integrates ethnographic, archaeological, and applied policy research approaches to support Indigenous self-determination, advance reconciliation, and foster transformative public understanding.

In 2023, Dr Thom was awarded Google’s Geo for Good Impact Award for his research and advocacy supporting Indigenous land rights. In 2022 Dr Thom was received the prestigious Leadership Victoria award for Extending Reconciliation. In 2021, Dr. Thom was named UVic’s Provost’s Engaged Scholar, an award recognizing excellence in Community-Engaged research and teaching. In 2020 he received the UVic Faculty of Social Sciences Outstanding Community Outreach Award.

  Google Impact Award

Brian Thom is profiled on  Wikipedia, and maintains a  website of his writing and other work.

Dr. Brian Thom answers the question " What is Anthropology?" for the People, Past and Place podcast.

Dr. Brian Thom is featured in the Borders in Globalization podcast on the question of  “Borderities and Territorialities of Indigenous Peoples” https://biglobalization.org/outputs/big-podcast-brian-thom/

Interests

  • Indigenous Rights and Indigenous Legal Orders

  • Modern-day Treaty Negotiations and Implementation

  • Coast Salish peoples and territories (Land, Law, and Governance)

  • Place, place names, and political ontology

  • Ethnographic Mapping and Cultural Landscapes

  • Applied Anthropology (Land Use, Policy, Reconciliation)

  • Community-Engaged Research and Collaboration

Courses

  • ANTH 311 Introduction to Engaged and Practicing Anthropology

  • ANTH 318 Ethnographic Research Methods

  • ANTH 433 Ethnographic Approaches to Coast Salish Land, Law and Culture
  • ANTH 460/520A Ethnographic Mapping and Indigenous Cartographies
  • ANTH 499 Honours Seminar
  • ANTH 585/685 Advanced Research Seminar in Space, Place, Knowledge, Power

  • ANTH 600 Professional Development in Anthropology

Current projects

Working with Indigenous legal scholar Dr. Sarah Morales in UVic's Faculty of Law, Dr. Thom has an ongoing project on Coast Salish legal orders, and their entanglements with Canadian law.

One of the central contributions of this work is to develop a framework for ethnographic methods -- which attend culturally and historically to a broad range of discourse, practice, and social and political structure -- to the emerging scholarship on Indigenous law in Canada. 

The work is attuned to practical application of these entangled legal orders to further empower Indigenous communities. Students participating in field schools through UVic's new JD/JID program are an important part of this work.

Working collaboratively with the WSANEC Leadership Council and the District of Saanich, Dr. Thom has an ongoing, award-winning project to centre Indigenous priorities, values, and goals into municipal land use planning.

The seaside community of Cordova Bay has been the centre of this work, where the protection of ancetral sites and the goal of making them more welcoming to Indigneous peoples have emerged as key themes.

Brian Thom founded and directs UVic’s Ethnographic Mapping Lab.

Dr. Thom’s ongoing work in mapping deploys ethnographic sensibilities to cartographic projects that are socially and politically powerful, particularly in support of Indigenous peoples title, rights and governance, and in promoting Indigenous place-based knowledge.

Dr. Thom primarily works with Google’s geo-tools (Google Earth, Google MyMaps, Google Earth Engine, Google Maps, etc). to leverage their powerful visualization framework with their highly accessible, low barriers workflows. Through these engagements, the research works to better reflect indigenous territoriality, land tenure, and senses of and attachments to place.

Working in a new partnership with Ritsumeikan Global Innovation Research Organization (R-GIRO) at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto Japan and Coast Salish community partners to examine public archaeology in Japan and British Columbia. 

 We are interested in the way their archaeological heritage is understood, presented, and protected today in Japan and Coast Salish territories in BC strikingly different. We're exploring why – looking at how things like societal values, laws, and public education shape the story of the past and its impact on the present. How do public narratives about archaeological sites influence community identity and politics? How do legal frameworks shape our understanding and stewardship of the past? Our initial collaboration in 2025-26 will lay the groundwork for a larger project asking big questions about heritage, identity, and the power of archaeological stories.

Dr. Thom has several ongoing collaborations with Coast Salish communities to commemorate, celebrate and make visible cultural landscapes that have been threatened or impacted by urban development, which these communities have chosen to share with the larger public.

These projects have critical dimensions of engaging with publics – from school children to municipal planners – who can benefit from careful and sensitive anthropological lenses that at once challenge ongoing colonial legacies, and appreciate and foreground Indigenous ways of knowing and being. 

The Commemorating Ye’yumnuts project with Cowichan Tribes is one of these projects. Their website provides resources for teachers working to incorporate Indigenous values and knowledge through BC’s new curriculum.

Ancient B.C. Indigenous settlement to become outdoor history classroom

Cowichan Valley ancestral site connects youth to their roots

Dr. Thom is the academic partner for project lead by Tla'amin Nation on looking at the nexus of Food, Climate, and Biodiversity in self-government under modern-day treaty. This work is part of the Canada case study for the UBC-bases SSHRC Partnership Grant project Solving-FCB https://solvingfcb.org/case-studies/canada/

This multi-year project examines the strategies and outcomes of First Nations communities’ work to incorporate food security into Indigenous rights and governance recognition agreements.

This work draws on the community-generated hypothesis that the implementation of Aboriginal and treaty rights, and establishment of successful self-governance frameworks are key to re-establishing food security, and seeks to highlight best practices in this critical but largely unstudied social determinate of community health and well-being.

  • Brian Thom is a member of the Montréal-based Centre for Indigenous Conservation and Development Alternatives where he works with Hul’q’umi’nun’ community partners and is co-lead of the community mapping axis.
  • Balance Co-Lab is a SSHRC Partnership Grant funded research team working to design and advance a sustainability framework for decision-making in Indigenous communities that ensures their values, knowledge and concerns are at the forefront as they assess development proposals on their lands. Dr. Thom is a co-investigator on this team, providing expertise on area of care for ancestral sites and place-based culture values. https://balancecolab.com/

Opportunities for prospective graduate students

Dr Thom has several new and ongoing research projects related to his work with and for Indigenous communities. Please contact him if you are interested in finding out more about opportunities with these projects in the Sep 2026 academic year and beyond.

Selected publications

Recent graduate student theses

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