A.R.T. & Justice (Action, Reciprocity, Transformation & Justice) is a collaborative Participatory Action Research project committed to supporting the holistic health, well-being, and dignity of currently and formerly incarcerated people in BC through Indigenous-guided and trauma-informed art and creative writing initiatives.ย
We believe that storytelling can build community, reduce stigma, and support healing.
This research is Participatory Action Research, with people who have survived prison working with us as Leaders, Advisors, and Colleagues.
โ Participatory meaning we center the voices and wisdom of experts, people who are or have been incarcerated
โ Action meaning we believe research should do something positive
Partnership
This partnership includes researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC) School of Nursing, Indigenous Elders, Peer Leaders with lived and living experience of incarceration, and champions from the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC).
How it Started & Art Kit Information
Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, weโve been gifting art and writing kits to people in prison and inviting them to share their work, voice, and vision with us and the world.
Each kit contains:
- art and writing supplies,
- Indigenous teachings and medicines,
- messages of support from our team
- creative writing, visual art, and poetry prompts, including example poems from one of the Elders on our team.
Our team recognizes that historic and ongoing colonialism is foundational to the current Canadian prison system. We know that Indigenous Peoples face immense health and social inequities and that these are linked to disproportionate and unjust encounters with the prison system. In this context, we see art as a way to build community and dream of a better world.
We believe that art and writing are powerful tools of connection and social change.
Individuals who receive a kit are invited to share their art and writing with us and with other participating storytellers and artists. Consent, autonomy, and intellectual property rights are important to us, so participants can also choose not to share or digitize their work. They are also invited to take part in the research program to help us learn how to strengthen and sustain the program over time.