谈原住民社区:儿童保护从业者的观点

IF 0.1 Q4 FAMILY STUDIES First Peoples Child & Family Review Pub Date : 2020-05-25 DOI:10.7202/1069585AR
Christopher Walmsley
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引用次数: 3

摘要

儿童保护从业者将土著社区视为儿童的受害者、对手、参与者、合作伙伴和保护者。这些社区代表来自对加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省19名土著和非土著儿童保护社会工作者的访谈数据。社区的代表是由从业者与社区的地理关系和社区居住的时间长短(包括从业者的原籍社区)决定的。当与社区之间不存在信任关系时,从业者将社区视为受害者或对手。从业人员认为,在建立起信任后,社区在儿童保护方面具有参与性或伙伴性作用。当社区承担起儿童福利的全部责任时,从业者将社区视为儿童的保护者。在社区的不同代表与从业者的文化或组织赞助之间没有发现明确的联系。从业者自己的实践愿景被认为对与社区发展的关系有重大影响。
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Talking about the Aboriginal Community: Child Protection Practitioners’ Views
Child protection practitioners view Aboriginal communities as victim, adversary, participant, partner, and protector of children. These representations ofcommunities are derived from interview data with 19 Aboriginal and nonAboriginal 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 developed. When communities take full responsibility for children’s welfare, practitioners view the community as the protector of children. No clear association was found between the different representations of the community and the practitioner’s culture or organizational auspices. The practitioner’s own vision of practice is believed to significantly influence the relationship that develops with the community.
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Child First: Developing a New Youth Justice System A Commentary Against Aboriginal to non-Aboriginal Adoption A Review of the Literature on the Benefits and Drawbacks of Participatory Action Research Are They Really Neglected? A Look at Worker Perceptions of Neglect Through the Eyes of a National Data System Talking about the Aboriginal Community: Child Protection Practitioners’ Views
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