The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview

The dramatic overrepresentation of Indigenous families in North American governmental child welfare systems remains one of the most pressing and neglected issues facing Tribal Nations, child welfare policymakers and practitioners today. This paper is the third in a series of three papers (Authors) p...

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Main Authors: Haight, Wendy, Waubanascum, Cary, Glesener, David, Day, Priscilla, Bussey, Brenda, Nichols, Karen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0190740920320247
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:eee:cysrev:v:119:y:2020:i:c:s0190740920320247 2024-04-14T08:01:04+00:00 The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview Haight, Wendy Waubanascum, Cary Glesener, David Day, Priscilla Bussey, Brenda Nichols, Karen http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0190740920320247 unknown http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0190740920320247 article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:38:10Z The dramatic overrepresentation of Indigenous families in North American governmental child welfare systems remains one of the most pressing and neglected issues facing Tribal Nations, child welfare policymakers and practitioners today. This paper is the third in a series of three papers (Authors) presenting an ethnographic study of the Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies in the Department of Social Work, University of Minnesota – Duluth. The current paper focuses on the perspectives of the Center’s staff and allies, which is grounded in an Anishinaabe worldview, on the process of systems change in child welfare. It draws upon in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 13 participants with diverse roles and extended relationships with the Center. Participants provided knowledge and wisdom on how to create and sustain trusting, collaborative relationships within sovereign Tribal Nations, county and state child welfare systems. They described how Center staff members are then able to create bridges (mesosystems) across Indigenous communities and child welfare systems with the trust built within each of those systems. These mesosystems are sustained over time through continued opportunities for engagement and collaboration. These processes are illustrated through several case exemplars of change affected by the Center, tribes and their collaborators: state legislation to strengthen ICWA, implementation of statewide continuing education for child welfare professionals, and an innovative ICWA court. The primary barrier to system change noted by participants is structural racism. Advice for those motivated to support systems change includes establishing close links with Indigenous communities. Systems change; Child welfare; Indigenous; ICWA; Disparities; Article in Journal/Newspaper anishina* RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description The dramatic overrepresentation of Indigenous families in North American governmental child welfare systems remains one of the most pressing and neglected issues facing Tribal Nations, child welfare policymakers and practitioners today. This paper is the third in a series of three papers (Authors) presenting an ethnographic study of the Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies in the Department of Social Work, University of Minnesota – Duluth. The current paper focuses on the perspectives of the Center’s staff and allies, which is grounded in an Anishinaabe worldview, on the process of systems change in child welfare. It draws upon in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 13 participants with diverse roles and extended relationships with the Center. Participants provided knowledge and wisdom on how to create and sustain trusting, collaborative relationships within sovereign Tribal Nations, county and state child welfare systems. They described how Center staff members are then able to create bridges (mesosystems) across Indigenous communities and child welfare systems with the trust built within each of those systems. These mesosystems are sustained over time through continued opportunities for engagement and collaboration. These processes are illustrated through several case exemplars of change affected by the Center, tribes and their collaborators: state legislation to strengthen ICWA, implementation of statewide continuing education for child welfare professionals, and an innovative ICWA court. The primary barrier to system change noted by participants is structural racism. Advice for those motivated to support systems change includes establishing close links with Indigenous communities. Systems change; Child welfare; Indigenous; ICWA; Disparities;
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Haight, Wendy
Waubanascum, Cary
Glesener, David
Day, Priscilla
Bussey, Brenda
Nichols, Karen
spellingShingle Haight, Wendy
Waubanascum, Cary
Glesener, David
Day, Priscilla
Bussey, Brenda
Nichols, Karen
The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview
author_facet Haight, Wendy
Waubanascum, Cary
Glesener, David
Day, Priscilla
Bussey, Brenda
Nichols, Karen
author_sort Haight, Wendy
title The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview
title_short The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview
title_full The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview
title_fullStr The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview
title_full_unstemmed The Center for Regional and Tribal Child Welfare Studies: Systems change through a relational Anishinaabe worldview
title_sort center for regional and tribal child welfare studies: systems change through a relational anishinaabe worldview
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0190740920320247
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0190740920320247
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