For youth under child welfare, transitioning out of residential care and reintegrating into their community can be a difficult process. This may be especially true for Inuit youth who, because they are away from their communities, cannot develop networks and relationships that would provide a secure place for their development as an adult and as a community member. The objectives of this study were to document how transition out of care is addressed in a residence specialized for Inuit youth under government care, and to explore, from the perspective of residential managers and staff, what factors facilitate or create obstacles to successful transition. Interviews were conducted to discuss the transition of 11 youth from residential placeme...
Indigenous peoples have been residing in Canada for more than five thousand years. In northern Canad...
Growing numbers of children in youth are in out-of-home care, and the complexity of the challenges a...
This article builds upon limited resources available to support counsellors working with the Inuit p...
Over 30 % of children in Nunavik have been reported to child welfare services by professionals, comm...
2 This thesis is the story of how forms of relatedness in social organization and kinship changed am...
Objective: This paper discusses the organization of mental health care for youth in Nunavik and cons...
The community of Qamanittuaq, like many communities in Nunavut, suffers from disproportionate levels...
The community of Qamanittuaq, like many communities in Nunavut, suffers from disproportionate levels...
This research explores Nunavut’s child welfare system through a review of research on child welfare...
Abstract Background Provision of culturally safe care has been proposed to address health inequity, ...
Life for Inuit communities in Canada’s northern territory of Nunavut has been impacted by rapid chan...
Indigenous youth aging out of government care face many challenges that other youth their age are no...
Residential settings are commonly thought of as the most restrictive placement along the continuum a...
Manitoba is home to approximately 1,500 Inuit, and sees 16,000 consults yearly from the Kivalliq reg...
Objective: Provincial and territorial legislation across Canada mandates child welfare agencies to r...
Indigenous peoples have been residing in Canada for more than five thousand years. In northern Canad...
Growing numbers of children in youth are in out-of-home care, and the complexity of the challenges a...
This article builds upon limited resources available to support counsellors working with the Inuit p...
Over 30 % of children in Nunavik have been reported to child welfare services by professionals, comm...
2 This thesis is the story of how forms of relatedness in social organization and kinship changed am...
Objective: This paper discusses the organization of mental health care for youth in Nunavik and cons...
The community of Qamanittuaq, like many communities in Nunavut, suffers from disproportionate levels...
The community of Qamanittuaq, like many communities in Nunavut, suffers from disproportionate levels...
This research explores Nunavut’s child welfare system through a review of research on child welfare...
Abstract Background Provision of culturally safe care has been proposed to address health inequity, ...
Life for Inuit communities in Canada’s northern territory of Nunavut has been impacted by rapid chan...
Indigenous youth aging out of government care face many challenges that other youth their age are no...
Residential settings are commonly thought of as the most restrictive placement along the continuum a...
Manitoba is home to approximately 1,500 Inuit, and sees 16,000 consults yearly from the Kivalliq reg...
Objective: Provincial and territorial legislation across Canada mandates child welfare agencies to r...
Indigenous peoples have been residing in Canada for more than five thousand years. In northern Canad...
Growing numbers of children in youth are in out-of-home care, and the complexity of the challenges a...
This article builds upon limited resources available to support counsellors working with the Inuit p...