A 40-minute drive on winding, icy roads took Dr. Sable to Goose 
Bay, Labrador and the fruition of 15 years of work with the Innu Nation.
   
“Prote Poker, the Grand Chief, had flown in from the community of
 Natuashish to work on the Innu Constitution,” says Sable, Director of 
Aboriginal and Northern Research for Saint Mary’s Gorsebrook Research 
Institute. “There was a very small window of opportunity to meet with 
him.”
Described by Sable as a groundbreaker in terms of recognizing 
intellectual property rights of indigenous communities in co-researching
 and participating in major research grants, the new MOU lays the 
foundation for a collaboration that supports the Innu Nation’s process 
of self governance. 
“The signing was a momentous occasion,” says 
Sable, who worked for more than a year crafting the document with Gina 
Funicelli of Saint Mary’s Industry Liaison Office and Richard Nuna of 
the Innu Nation Environment Office. Support throughout the project came 
from David Gauthier, Saint Mary’s V.P. Academic, and Kevin Vessey, Dean,
 Faculty of Graduate Research. 
“It was also a fairly miraculous 
event,” adds Dr. Sable. “After years of working to make this happen, 
everything came together over the course of a few days, including Dr. 
Dodds signing the MOU.”
Photo: Grand Chief Prote Poker of the Innu Nation and Dr. Trudy Sable of Saint Mary's University 
News story originally published on Saint Mary's website
    
        Saint Mary's signs MOU with Innu Nation to collaborate on research
Wed, May 21, 2014
    
    
		Dr. Trudy Sable had just begun a six-day stay to work with the Innu community of Sheshatshiu when the call came to meet with Grand Chief Prote Poker for the official signing of an MOU with Saint Mary's University.