Angela Sterritt is an award-winning investigative journalist, TV, radio, and podcast host, and national bestselling author. She is from the Wilp Wiik’aax (we-GAK) of the Gitanmaax (GIT-in-max) community within the Gitxsan (GICK-san) Nation on her dad’s side and from Bell Island, Newfoundland on her maternal side. Sterritt worked as a television, radio, and digital journalist at CBC for more than a decade. She also hosted the award-winning CBC original podcast, Land Back.
Her book Unbroken, published by Greystone Books, is part memoir and part investigation into the murders and disappearances of Indigenous women and girls. It became an instant national bestseller in May 2023. Unbroken was nominated for the Governor General’s Literary Awards, one of Canada’s oldest and most prestigious literary prizes. It was also nominated for the prestigious Hilary Weston Writer’s Trust award for best non-fiction book in Canada.
In 2024, Sterritt announced her second book, BREAKABLE, which will investigate how racism and colonialism cultivate harmful behaviors in men and how Indigenous men and communities are breaking cycles of unhealthy notions of masculinity. Greystone Books will publish Breakable in the spring of 2026.
In 2021, Sterritt won an Academy Award (Canadian Screen Award) for Best Reporter of the Year in Canada for her coverage of an Indigenous man and his then 12-year-old granddaughter who were arrested while trying to open a bank account at BMO. For the same reporting, Sterritt also won a national Radio Television Digital News Association award. In 2020, Sterritt was named in Vancouver Magazine’s Power 50 list of the city’s 50 most influential people.

In 2020, she was nominated for best local reporter by the Canadian Screen Awards for her reporting on Indigenous babies apprehended by the Ministry of Children and Family Development. In 2019, Sterritt’s documentary on the complexity of Indigenous support for and challenges against the TransMountain Pipeline expansion project won an RTDNA award for best long feature.
In 2017, Sterritt accepted the Investigative Award of the Year from Canadian Journalists for Free Expression for coverage of missing and murdered Indigenous women. She was awarded a prestigious William Southam Journalism Fellowship at Massey College in Toronto and was the first known First Nations person in Canada ever to receive the award in the school’s 60-year history. She has taught as a sessional instructor at the University of British Columbia, Western University, Simon Fraser University, and Thompson Rivers University.
As a motivational speaker, Sterritt talks about overcoming adversity, breaking stereotypes, and creating change and relationships in Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities. In 2020, she gave a Ted Talk about smashing stereotypes of Indigenous people.
She is available to be reached at the contacts below:
For queries related to Angela’s book, Unbroken or to book a motivational talk or keynote address, please contact angela.sterritt@gmail.com
OR

good going Angela
LikeLiked by 2 people
You are doing so well. I’m so proud of you. This page made me cry.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Hello Angela,
My name is Nassy Fesharaki and can easily be found on line. I claim to be a poet and filmmaker and have done some works but I am a person concerned with the Indigenous people in general and in the Americas in particular. I love to get more insight to the roots and reasons of our sisters’ disappearing…I intend to compare their lives with those in Andes and, possibly, write a proper script to make a film.
I wonder how much you can help though I do know that you are smart and hardworking!?
Will you kindly inform me of your interest and availability?
I have started to follow you on twitter!
LikeLike
Can you look into “nominal roll” it forces kids back to the reserve to receive funding. I moved away from reserve a long time ago. My girls go to catholic school in Kamloops. And unless I live on reserve (any reserve ) I will be funded. Really? Your only native on your own reserve. If I was to move to another reserve?? This does not make sense and is old rules that need to be changed .
LikeLike
Hi Angela. I am greatly enjoying your voice/perspective on B.C. Almanac, you’re doing a great job keeping the calls flowing and staying close to the heart of the issues.
LikeLike
Thank you so much for this!!!
LikeLike
Hi Angela, thanks for hosting the CBC Radio BC Today show. You were definitely not rude to any caller and I appreciate you informing the listeners about mistruths regarding funding to address inequities that exist for Indigenous Peoples. I think it is a matter of ignorance of the continuing disadvantages Indigenous People face in n our society. I think your guest helped to explain the basis for efforts to correct the living experience for Indigenous as well as other people of colour and gender diversity. This is in part to you pressing the point of what candidates in the BC election are saying that is not appropriate nor helpful in addressing these inequalities.
Thanks
C. Watson
LikeLike
Hi Angela: would you be willing to speak to my journalism students by Zoom about your work?
LikeLike