Internationally, the welfare of Indigenous children continues to be severely compromised by their involvement with child welfare authorities. In this context, there are calls for greater investment in early childhood programs to support family preservation and children’s well-being. This article reports on the findings from a critical qualitative inquiry undertaken with Aboriginal Infant Development Programs (AIDPs) in Canada. The findings highlight how AIDP workers’ relational approaches countered Indigenous mothers’ experiences of feeling "like a bad parent" as a result of their involvement with the child welfare system and how workers navigated an increasingly close relationship with this system. We draw on the concept of structural viol...
Canadian child welfare is not one single system, but more than 13 systems overseen by provincial and...
Indigenous children are overrepresented in child protection systems in the United States and to an e...
Purpose: Promoting a child’s healthy growth and development in the first six years of life is critic...
Internationally, the welfare of Indigenous children continues to be severely compromised by their in...
Available data suggest that First Nations children, youth and families in Canada continue to experie...
Improving the health of Indigenous children and fostering health equity requires a radical shift bey...
This chapter critiques historical and contemporary child protection approaches that are viewed as re...
As the relationships between Canada’s Aboriginal peoples and the state undergo changes, the issue of...
First Nations children are chronically overrepresented in the child welfare system in Canada. This i...
The Canadian Incidence Study on Reported Child Abuse and Neglect (Trocme, 2001) found that structura...
This article considers the unique challenge for Aboriginal professionals working in a government chi...
The overrepresentation of Aboriginal youth in child welfare services in Canada is a concerning reali...
While analysis of the relationship between housing and child welfare is limited in the Canadian acad...
The character of Indian child welfare discourse in Canada is highly polemic and politically charged....
A series of recent legal and policy developments in Canada have potential to contribute to reconcili...
Canadian child welfare is not one single system, but more than 13 systems overseen by provincial and...
Indigenous children are overrepresented in child protection systems in the United States and to an e...
Purpose: Promoting a child’s healthy growth and development in the first six years of life is critic...
Internationally, the welfare of Indigenous children continues to be severely compromised by their in...
Available data suggest that First Nations children, youth and families in Canada continue to experie...
Improving the health of Indigenous children and fostering health equity requires a radical shift bey...
This chapter critiques historical and contemporary child protection approaches that are viewed as re...
As the relationships between Canada’s Aboriginal peoples and the state undergo changes, the issue of...
First Nations children are chronically overrepresented in the child welfare system in Canada. This i...
The Canadian Incidence Study on Reported Child Abuse and Neglect (Trocme, 2001) found that structura...
This article considers the unique challenge for Aboriginal professionals working in a government chi...
The overrepresentation of Aboriginal youth in child welfare services in Canada is a concerning reali...
While analysis of the relationship between housing and child welfare is limited in the Canadian acad...
The character of Indian child welfare discourse in Canada is highly polemic and politically charged....
A series of recent legal and policy developments in Canada have potential to contribute to reconcili...
Canadian child welfare is not one single system, but more than 13 systems overseen by provincial and...
Indigenous children are overrepresented in child protection systems in the United States and to an e...
Purpose: Promoting a child’s healthy growth and development in the first six years of life is critic...