A research project was implemented through the use of qualitative secondary data analysis to describe a theory of culturally restorative child welfare practice with the application of cultural attachment theory. The research documented 20 years of service practice that promoted Anishinaabe cultural identity and cultural attachment strategies by fostering the natural cultural resiliencies that exist within the Anishinaabe nation. The research brings a suggested methodology to child welfare services for First Nations children; the greater the application of cultural attachment strategies the greater the response to cultural restoration processes within a First Nations community
Twenty staff members working for an urban Aboriginal child welfare organization were interviewed and...
Available data suggest that First Nations children, youth and families in Canada continue to experie...
Little research has been conducted regarding how culture is used in assessing parenting capabilities...
A research project was implemented through the use of qualitative secondary data analysis to describ...
A research project was implemented through the use of qualitative secondary data analysis to describ...
This thesis is concerned with cultural connection and its role in creating cultural permanence when ...
The Musqueam Indian band has no formal child welfare agreement with the province of British Columbia...
Secure attachment has been consistently associated with positive outcomes for children. The complex ...
As a response to the persistent overrepresentation of Aboriginal children in out-of-home care, effor...
The number of Indigenous children and youth that continue to be removed from family and community an...
The character of Indian child welfare discourse in Canada is highly polemic and politically charged....
The Nitsiyihkâson project was conceived in order to develop a resource to promote at...
The Nitsiyihkâson project was conceived in order to develop a resource to promote attachment and dev...
This research explores Nunavut’s child welfare system through a review of research on child welfare...
The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA) is an important piece of legislation that governs the re...
Twenty staff members working for an urban Aboriginal child welfare organization were interviewed and...
Available data suggest that First Nations children, youth and families in Canada continue to experie...
Little research has been conducted regarding how culture is used in assessing parenting capabilities...
A research project was implemented through the use of qualitative secondary data analysis to describ...
A research project was implemented through the use of qualitative secondary data analysis to describ...
This thesis is concerned with cultural connection and its role in creating cultural permanence when ...
The Musqueam Indian band has no formal child welfare agreement with the province of British Columbia...
Secure attachment has been consistently associated with positive outcomes for children. The complex ...
As a response to the persistent overrepresentation of Aboriginal children in out-of-home care, effor...
The number of Indigenous children and youth that continue to be removed from family and community an...
The character of Indian child welfare discourse in Canada is highly polemic and politically charged....
The Nitsiyihkâson project was conceived in order to develop a resource to promote at...
The Nitsiyihkâson project was conceived in order to develop a resource to promote attachment and dev...
This research explores Nunavut’s child welfare system through a review of research on child welfare...
The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA) is an important piece of legislation that governs the re...
Twenty staff members working for an urban Aboriginal child welfare organization were interviewed and...
Available data suggest that First Nations children, youth and families in Canada continue to experie...
Little research has been conducted regarding how culture is used in assessing parenting capabilities...