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 Featured Title
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Protecting Aboriginal Children
Chris Walmsley  

$85.00 Hardcover
Release Date: 10/25/2005
ISBN: 9780774811705    


$30.95 Paperback
Release Date: 7/1/2006
ISBN: 9780774811712    


192 Pages





OTHER WAYS TO ORDER

About the Book

Beginning in the 1960s, large numbers of Aboriginal children in Canada were removed from their families by provincial child welfare services. Known as the “sixties scoop,” the practice caused great harm to individuals and families and devastated communities. Today Aboriginal children comprise roughly half the children in state care, but since the 1980s, bands and tribal councils have developed unique community-based child welfare services to better protect Aboriginal children.

Protecting Aboriginal Children explores contemporary approaches to the protection of Aboriginal children through interviews with practising social workers employed at Aboriginal child welfare organizations and the child protection service in British Columbia. It places current practice in a sociohistorical context, describes emerging practice in decolonizing communities, and identifies the effects of political and media controversy on social workers.

This is the first book to document emerging practice in Aboriginal communities and describe child protection practice simultaneously from the point of view of the Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal social worker.

Those working in child welfare or contemplating a career in child protection will find the book an insightful analysis of current practice thinking and experience. Aboriginal peoples with an interest in health and human services, as well as social work students, child welfare workers and administrators, and health, education, and human service professionals will find it particularly useful.


About the Author(s)

Christopher Walmsley teaches in the School of Social Work and Human Service at Thompson Rivers University.


Table of Contents

Foreword / ix
Acknowledgments / xiii

1 Introduction / 1
2 The Historical Context / 8
3 The British Columbia Context / 19
4 A Description of Practice / 31
5 The Sociopolitical Practice Context / 47
6 Organizational Context of Practice / 63
7 The Community Context / 74
8 Visions, Explanations, and Knowledge for Practice / 83
9 Choices for Change / 108
10 Social Representations of Child Protection Practice / 124

Appendices
1 Note on the Theoretical Framework / 139
2 Note on Methodology / 148

References / 158
Index / 167


Reviews

For far too long Aboriginal children have not received the justice and respect that is owed to them, and Protecting Aboriginal Children will go a long way towards rectifying this situation. Dr. Christopher Walmsley has approached the subject of social work practice in the Aboriginal community by paying the utmost respect to the historical perspectives of Aboriginal peoples. He is aware of past social injustices and looks at how justice and respect can be intertwined with the practice of social work. This book is one more step towards gaining a better understanding of a vast array of issues that are being dealt with in the Aboriginal community.
-- Bill Simon, Elsipogtog First Nation (Mi’kmag), Executive Director, Secwepemc Child and Family Services Agency (200-05) in Kamloops, B.C.

Protecting Aboriginal Children is a timely and important book. Based on original research, it examines child protection issues and their impact upon First Nations children, their families and practitioners. Although it examines the painful legacy of a long and shameful period in Canadian social work history… its focus is on how to improve practice in child welfare by recognizing and celebrating difference and … working in an anti-oppressive manner with First Nations peoples. This book will contribute to the healing processes that will enable practitioners to engage with indigenous children and their families… in a holistic and respectful manner.
- Lena Dominelli, President of the International Association of Schools of Social Work, 1996 – 2004, and author of Anti-Oppressive Social Work Theory and Practice, among many other publications.


This little volume fares quite well as a single message book, that message being that historically, child and family practice in Aboriginal communities in British Columbia has been a dismal failure.
- John W. Friesen, University of Calgary, Canadian Ethnic Studies, Vol. 38, No. 1, 2006 .

Trial lawyers specializing in aboriginal law will find this text to be the first of its kind describing child protection proceedings from the standpoint of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal social workers. The 1960s practice of mass removal of Native children from their homes resulted in roughly half of all children in care being from Aboriginal families. The author sets out creative and humane alternatives to the past processes.
-- Alberta Civil Trial Lawyers Association, The Barrister, No. 79, March 2006.

There is no better way to uncover the context and inner working of social work with Aboriginal children that through an analysis of how social workers themselves create meaning for their work. Christopher Walmsley goes straight to the heart of the matter with his well-written account of how social workers describe and explain their daily work...the book weaves an intricate story that looks first at the national and provincial historical context, the sociopolitical context, and finally the organizational and community contexts. If one is looking for a comprehensive overview of the context of child protection with Aboriginal children, particularly in BC, then this is a must read.
--Steven F. Hicks, Labour/Le Travail, Fall 2006


Sample Chapter

Sample Chapter


Related Topics

Native Studies > Canada
Public Policy
Children
Native Studies


Other Ways To Order

In Canada, order your copy of Protecting Aboriginal Children from UTP Distribution at:

UTP Distribution
5201 Dufferin Street
Toronto, Ontario
M3H 5T8

Phone orders: 1(800)565-9523 or (416)667-7791
Fax orders: 1(800)221-9985 or (416)667-7832
Email: utpbooks@utpress.utoronto.ca

Ordering information for customers outside Canada


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