Investing in Saving Lives: Designing Second-Stage Women’s Shelters on First Nation Reserves

IF 0.5 Q4 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Canadian Journal of Nonprofit and Social Economy Research Pub Date : 2023-03-20 DOI:10.29173/cjnser557
Courtney Allary, S. Thompson, S. Mallory-Hill
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Abstract

Most Indigenous women in Canada (61%) experience intimate partner violence (IPV), which is significantly worse than the high rate of 44 percent for other women in Canada. Despite the great risk for IPV, only three unfunded second-stage shelters for more than 600 First Nation reserves exist in Canada to provide First Nation women and their children a safe home. Second-stage housing offers IPV survivors transitional homes for an extended period that provide safety and renewal after their initial emergency shelter stays. This article documents the need for safe, nurturing, and culturally appropriate second-stage shelters for Indigenous women and their families to heal and rebuild. The authors provide two second-stage prototype designs based on domestic environmental analysis and concepts of houselessness, home, and co-housing. We discuss how these designs are one step in an action plan to protect Indigenous women and stop the genocide of Indigenous Peoples by supporting cultural, economic, health, and social development. The literature review and design concepts form an agenda to have design goals for housing IPV survivors that answers the “Calls to Justice for Murdered and Missing Women” and expands this needed service to every reserve.
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投资拯救生命:在第一民族保护区设计第二阶段的妇女庇护所
大多数加拿大土著妇女(61%)经历过亲密伴侣暴力(IPV),这比加拿大其他妇女44%的高比率要严重得多。尽管IPV的风险很大,但加拿大600多个第一民族保护区只有三个没有资金的第二阶段庇护所,为第一民族妇女及其子女提供安全的家。第二阶段住房为IPV幸存者提供较长时期的过渡性住房,在他们最初的紧急住房停留后提供安全和更新。这篇文章记录了为土著妇女及其家庭提供安全、养育和文化上适当的第二阶段庇护所的必要性,以进行治疗和重建。作者根据国内环境分析和无家可归者、家和共同住房的概念提供了两个第二阶段的原型设计。我们讨论了这些设计如何成为通过支持文化、经济、卫生和社会发展来保护土著妇女和制止对土著人民的种族灭绝的行动计划中的一个步骤。文献回顾和设计概念形成了一个议程,为IPV幸存者提供住房的设计目标,回应了“为被谋杀和失踪妇女伸张正义的呼吁”,并将这种需要的服务扩展到每个保护区。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
20
审稿时长
20 weeks
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