Resistance to Assimilation: Expanding Understandings of First Nations Cultural Connection in Child Protection and Out-of-home Care

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL WORK Australian Social Work Pub Date : 2022-08-15 DOI:10.1080/0312407X.2022.2106443
Jacynta Krakouer, S. Nakata, James Beaufils, Sue Hunter, Tatiana Corrales, Heather Morris, H. Skouteris
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures are integrated into child protection and out-of-home care (OOHC) systems via the connection element of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Child Placement Principle (ATSICPP). This article focuses on cultural connection in Australian child protection and OOHC systems over time, from its inception to its contemporary use to improve health and wellbeing and ameliorate cultural disconnection. An expanded understanding of cultural connection in Australian OOHC systems is articulated where cultural connection is theorised as a process of culturally connecting, while a critical position concerning the risk of cultural disconnection in OOHC is held. Indigenous cultures are fundamental to individual and community health and wellbeing. However, cultural connection in Australian OOHC systems risks becoming a site of bureaucratic policy compliance to ameliorate the effects of cultural disconnection produced by disproportionate First Nations child removals. This article illuminates this critical position while theorising how culturally connecting can be better understood in OOHC. IMPLICATIONS Cultural connection for First Nations children and young people is important for health and wellbeing, but is poorly understood in child protection and out-of-home care contexts. Cultural connection includes a community element, where culture acts as a point of distinctiveness to show that Indigenous peoples are surviving. At this juncture, cultural connection is a tool to resist the assimilatory impacts associated with ongoing child protection removals. Cultural connection can be understood as a complex journey of connecting for First Nations children and young people.
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对同化的抵制:在儿童保护和家庭外护理中扩大对原住民文化联系的理解
土著和托雷斯海峡岛民文化通过土著和托雷斯海峡岛民儿童安置原则(ATSICPP)的连接元素融入儿童保护和家庭外护理(OOHC)系统。本文重点关注澳大利亚儿童保护和OOHC系统的文化联系,从其成立到当代使用,以改善健康和福祉,改善文化脱节。本文阐述了对澳大利亚OOHC系统中文化联系的扩展理解,其中文化联系被理论化为文化联系的过程,同时对OOHC中文化脱节的风险持批评态度。土著文化对个人和社区的健康和福祉至关重要。然而,澳大利亚OOHC系统中的文化联系有可能成为官僚政策遵从的场所,以改善不成比例的原住民儿童迁移所产生的文化脱节的影响。本文阐明了这一关键立场,并从理论上阐述了如何更好地理解文化联系。土著儿童和青年的文化联系对健康和福祉很重要,但在儿童保护和家庭外照料方面了解甚少。文化联系包括一种社区因素,其中文化作为一种独特性,表明土著人民正在生存。在这个关键时刻,文化联系是一种工具,可以抵御与正在进行的儿童保护取消相关的同化影响。文化联系可以理解为第一民族儿童和年轻人的复杂联系之旅。
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来源期刊
Australian Social Work
Australian Social Work SOCIAL WORK-
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
16.70%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Australian Social Work is an international peer-reviewed journal reflecting current thinking and trends in Social Work. The Journal promotes the development of practice, policy and education, and publishes original research, theoretical papers and critical reviews that build on existing knowledge. The Journal also publishes reviews of relevant professional literature, commentary and analysis of social policies and encourages debate in the form of reader commentary on articles. Australian Social Work has grown out of the Australian context and continues to provide a vehicle for Australian and international authors. The Journal invites submission of papers from authors worldwide and all contributors are encouraged to present their work for an international readership.
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