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  1. Home /
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  3. Vol. 3 No. 1 (2007)

Vol. 3 No. 1 (2007)

Published: 2007-03-13

Full Issue

  • PDF

Articles

  • Foreword
    Michael Hart
    4
    • PDF
  • Ensuring Knowledge Transmission in the Aboriginal Child Welfare Field
    Marlyn Bennett
    5-9
    • PDF
  • Keeping First Nations children at home: A few Federal policy changes could make a big difference
    Fred Wien, Cindy Blackstock, John Loxley, Nico Trocmè
    10-14
    • PDF
  • The politics of kith and kin:Observations on the British Columbia government’s reaction to the death of Sherry Charlie
    Gerald Cradock
    15-33
    • PDF
  • Reflections of a Mi’kmaq social worker on a quarter of a century work in First Nations child welfare
    Nancy MacDonald, Judy MacDonald
    34-45
    • PDF
  • Promising practice for maintaining identities in First Nation adoption
    Jeannine Carriere
    46-64
    • PDF
  • Identity lost and found: Lessons from the sixties scoop
    Raven Sinclair
    65-82
    • PDF
  • Indigenous knowledge and research: The míkiwáhp as a symbol for reclaiming our knowledge and ways of knowing
    Michael Hart
    83-90
    • PDF
  • A way of life: Indigenous perspectives on anti oppressive living
    Robina Thomas, Jacquie Green
    91-104
    • PDF
  • Here be dragons! Reconciling Indigenous and Western knowledge to improve Aboriginal child welfare
    Jean LaFrance, Betty Bastien
    105-126
    • PDF
  • Are rural American Indian adolescents becoming a race of angels?
    John Cournane
    127-132
    • PDF
  • (A Literature Review) Re-examining issues behind the loss of family and cultural and the impact on Aboriginal youth suicide rates
    Kristine Morris
    133-142
    • PDF

About the Journal

The First Peoples Child & Family Review is an open-access, interdisciplinary, and peer-reviewed journal honouring the voices and perspectives of First peoples and non-Indigenous allies and supporters. Our mission is to promote research, critical analysis, stories, standpoints, and educational resources which advance innovation within child, family, and community based-matters for First Nations, Métis, and Inuit, as well as Indigenous peoples abroad. Read more about the journal.


 

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The First Peoples Child & Family Review is published twice a year by the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada. Articles herein are the responsibility of and copyrighted to the authors. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the official policies and/or opinions of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada.

       

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