“How About Being Trustworthy Rather Than Asking Families to Trust?”: A Prerequisite for Child Protection Authorities Partnering with Indigenous Communities
Australia’s Indigenous children are 12 times more likely than non-Indigenous children to be in out-of-home care, a rate that has been increasing. Since 2009, government policies have committed to keeping children safe in families through support, early intervention, and Indigenous self-determination...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal on child maltreatment : research, policy and practice policy and practice, 2024-12, Vol.7 (4), p.501-528 |
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container_title | International journal on child maltreatment : research, policy and practice |
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creator | Braithwaite, Valerie Ivec, Mary |
description | Australia’s Indigenous children are 12 times more likely than non-Indigenous children to be in out-of-home care, a rate that has been increasing. Since 2009, government policies have committed to keeping children safe in families through support, early intervention, and Indigenous self-determination. Action has not matched policy. Quantitative and qualitative survey data from third parties (
n
= 29 Indigenous and
n
= 358 non-Indigenous) are analysed with a view to understanding expectations and visions for reform. Third parties expressed distrust and resistance toward child protection authorities. Indigenous third parties more so. Achieving reform objectives depends on child protection authorities initiating relational repair with third parties through addressing ritualism, implementing policy and investing in genuine partnering. Indigenous third parties, in addition, identified institutional racism and cultural disrespect as obstacles to reform. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s42448-024-00200-4 |
format | Article |
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subjects | Aboriginal Australians Antisocial Behavior Apologies Child Abuse Child Health Child Safety Child sexual abuse Child welfare Child Well-being Children Collaboration Communities of Practice Culture Death Early intervention Educational Change Emotional abuse Evidence Based Practice Families & family life Family (Sociological Unit) Federal Government Foster Care Genocide Government Human rights Indigenous peoples Indigenous Populations Mainstreaming Native peoples Pedophilia Policy implementation Prime ministers Protection Public health Reconciliation Reforms Research Article Resistance Self determination Sexual abuse Social Sciences Social Services Systemic racism |
title | “How About Being Trustworthy Rather Than Asking Families to Trust?”: A Prerequisite for Child Protection Authorities Partnering with Indigenous Communities |
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