Peer reviewedChild protection practitioners view Aboriginal communities as victim, adversary, participant, partner, and protector of children. These representations of communities are derived from interview data with 19 Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal child protection social workers in British Columbia, Canada. The representations of the community are informed by the practitioner’s geographic relationship to the community and the length of community residency (including whether it’s the practitioner’s community of origin). Practitioners view communities as a victim or adversary when no relationship of trust exists with the community. Practitioners view communities having a participative or partnership role in child protection when trust has d...
It is challenging in British Columbia to recruit and retain Indigenous caregivers and foster parents...
In some jurisdictions of Australia, the rate of Indigenous children in foster, kinship and residenti...
As a response to the persistent overrepresentation of Aboriginal children in out-of-home care, effor...
Peer reviewedChild protection practitioners view Aboriginal communities as victim, adversary, partic...
Child protection practitioners view Aboriginal communities as victim, adversary, participant, partne...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are disproportionately represented in all parts of th...
One month before the June 2007 Federal Government Emergency Intervention in the Northern Territory s...
[Extract] When approached to write this chapter, we were asked to consider what skills and knowledge...
This article considers the unique challenge for Aboriginal professionals working in a government chi...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are disproportionately represented in all parts of th...
“The truth about stories is that’s all we are.” Thomas King (2003, p.2). This study is a reflective...
Twenty staff members working for an urban Aboriginal child welfare organization were interviewed and...
Very little is known about how Aboriginal parents experiencing vulnerabilities and communities perce...
The rate of Indigenous child removal in Australia has been referred to as an epidemic. With numbers ...
Knowledge about support and supervision needs of Indigenous child protection workers is missing from...
It is challenging in British Columbia to recruit and retain Indigenous caregivers and foster parents...
In some jurisdictions of Australia, the rate of Indigenous children in foster, kinship and residenti...
As a response to the persistent overrepresentation of Aboriginal children in out-of-home care, effor...
Peer reviewedChild protection practitioners view Aboriginal communities as victim, adversary, partic...
Child protection practitioners view Aboriginal communities as victim, adversary, participant, partne...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are disproportionately represented in all parts of th...
One month before the June 2007 Federal Government Emergency Intervention in the Northern Territory s...
[Extract] When approached to write this chapter, we were asked to consider what skills and knowledge...
This article considers the unique challenge for Aboriginal professionals working in a government chi...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are disproportionately represented in all parts of th...
“The truth about stories is that’s all we are.” Thomas King (2003, p.2). This study is a reflective...
Twenty staff members working for an urban Aboriginal child welfare organization were interviewed and...
Very little is known about how Aboriginal parents experiencing vulnerabilities and communities perce...
The rate of Indigenous child removal in Australia has been referred to as an epidemic. With numbers ...
Knowledge about support and supervision needs of Indigenous child protection workers is missing from...
It is challenging in British Columbia to recruit and retain Indigenous caregivers and foster parents...
In some jurisdictions of Australia, the rate of Indigenous children in foster, kinship and residenti...
As a response to the persistent overrepresentation of Aboriginal children in out-of-home care, effor...