My name is Karla Kakegamic, I work at the Office of the Provincial Advocate for Children and Youth as a Youth Amplifier connected to the Feathers of Hope project. A Youth Amplifier is a youth leader who helps organize events and helps keep the youth voice central in all aspect of our work
In this issue two articles address the need for sustainability in organisations and in a child welfa...
This commentary explores issues surrounding youth employment in Toronto from the point of view of a ...
The chapters in this book represent a selection of the many very fine presentations made at the Prai...
My name is Reina Foster, an Anishinaabekwe from Lac Seul First Nation in Treaty #3. I am the former ...
Contributions to volume 28:1 of the JLSP offered poignant insights into the root sources of the over...
The removal of children from their families and communities has long-lasting and often devastating c...
This article imagines a new model for child welfare in Ontario, specifically for African Canadian ch...
In Ontario, as elsewhere in the country, there are limited Indigenous-specific resources to assist i...
Kyptah gapeeksquan, Kiipapahick meeqwatch igoocheeyaan ta nah heeyowweeyaan Translation:Wait I will ...
I am very grateful to Canada for what it has done for impoverished people, refugees, and immigrants ...
What are conditions that facilitate the development of youth voice in child welfare? This article wi...
This paper examines the contribution that federal legislation could make to the governance of Indige...
In 2000, the authors of this editorial, along with a group of child welfare experts and allies, init...
In January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in First Nations Child and Family Caring Society...
Grounded in community-based research (CBR) principles and an anti-oppression framework, the Positive...
In this issue two articles address the need for sustainability in organisations and in a child welfa...
This commentary explores issues surrounding youth employment in Toronto from the point of view of a ...
The chapters in this book represent a selection of the many very fine presentations made at the Prai...
My name is Reina Foster, an Anishinaabekwe from Lac Seul First Nation in Treaty #3. I am the former ...
Contributions to volume 28:1 of the JLSP offered poignant insights into the root sources of the over...
The removal of children from their families and communities has long-lasting and often devastating c...
This article imagines a new model for child welfare in Ontario, specifically for African Canadian ch...
In Ontario, as elsewhere in the country, there are limited Indigenous-specific resources to assist i...
Kyptah gapeeksquan, Kiipapahick meeqwatch igoocheeyaan ta nah heeyowweeyaan Translation:Wait I will ...
I am very grateful to Canada for what it has done for impoverished people, refugees, and immigrants ...
What are conditions that facilitate the development of youth voice in child welfare? This article wi...
This paper examines the contribution that federal legislation could make to the governance of Indige...
In 2000, the authors of this editorial, along with a group of child welfare experts and allies, init...
In January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in First Nations Child and Family Caring Society...
Grounded in community-based research (CBR) principles and an anti-oppression framework, the Positive...
In this issue two articles address the need for sustainability in organisations and in a child welfa...
This commentary explores issues surrounding youth employment in Toronto from the point of view of a ...
The chapters in this book represent a selection of the many very fine presentations made at the Prai...