Writing

My writing is grounded in a long-standing interest in governance, power, and the conditions under which collective life is organized and contested. It focuses on Indigenous–settler relations, legal and institutional history, and questions of authority, responsibility, and relationship as they are lived in practice. My work includes peer-reviewed scholarship, a forthcoming collaborative book, and occasional professional writing for the legal community.

Books

  • Jacquelyn E. Miller, Kilslaay Kaaji Sding Miles G. Richardson, and Nancy J. Turner, Reconciling Ways of Knowing: Bringing Indigenous Knowledge and Science Together in Caring for the Earth and our Relations (Greystone Books Ltd., forthcoming).

Articles and Essays

  • Kyla Lee and Jacquelyn E. Miller, “Supporting Neurodivergent Lawyers for a Better Legal Profession” (Feb 17, 2026) BarTalk.
  • Jacquelyn Miller, “Camus Nullius: How Beacon Hill Park came to be imposed on a pillar of the lək̓ʷəŋən peoples’ food and inter-national trade economy” (2025) 226 BC Studies 31.
  • Andrea Reid, Jesse Popp, Deborah McGregor, Jacquie Miller, Albert Marshall, “Twenty Essential Reads to Enable Two-Eyed Seeing in Aquatic Research and Management” (2020) Fall 2020 IAGLR Lakes Letter 9.

Contributions to Anthologies

  • Deborah McGregor, Jesse Popp, Andrea Reid, Elder Albert Marshall, Jacquelyn Miller, and Mahisha Sritharan, “Etuaptmumk / Two-Eyed Seeing and Reconciliation with Earth” in Andrea Olive, Chance Finegan, and Karen F. Beazley, Transformative Politics of Nature: Overcoming Barriers to Conservation in Canada (University of Toronto Press, 2023).

Book Reviews

  • Jacquelyn Miller, Book Review of Deep and Sheltered Waters: The History of Tod Inlet by David R. Gray with a foreword by Nancy J. Turner and Robert D. Turner (2021) 210 BC Studies 119.

Previous academic research

  • Jacquelyn E. Miller, Radical Democracy, Michel Foucault, and the Limits of the Modern Subject. A critical analysis of sovereignty and states of exception in modern democratic politics. Master’s thesis (University of Victoria).