First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves

Pregnant First Nations women who live on reserves in rural and remote regions of Canada are routinely evacuated to urban cities to await labour and birth; this is commonly referred to as Health Canada's evacuation policy. I produced two stand alone papers to investigate this policy. In the fisr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lawford, Karen
Other Authors: Giles, Audrey R.
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26034
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spelling ftunivottawa:oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/26034 2023-05-15T16:13:52+02:00 First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves Lawford, Karen Giles, Audrey R. 2011 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26034 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26034 2011 ftunivottawa 2021-01-04T17:08:35Z Pregnant First Nations women who live on reserves in rural and remote regions of Canada are routinely evacuated to urban cities to await labour and birth; this is commonly referred to as Health Canada's evacuation policy. I produced two stand alone papers to investigate this policy. In the fisrt, I investigated the development and implementation of the Canadian government's evacuation policy. Archival research showed that the evacuation policy began to take shape in 1892 and was founded on Canada's goals to assimilate and civilize First Nations. My second paper employed First Nations feminist theory to understand why the evacuation policy does not result in good health, especially for the First Nations women. Because the evacuation policy is incongruent with First Nations' epistemologies, it compromises First Nations' health. I offer policy recommendations to promote First Nations health in a way that is consistent with Firsy Nations' espitemologies and goals towards self-determination and self-governance. Other/Unknown Material First Nations uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
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language English
description Pregnant First Nations women who live on reserves in rural and remote regions of Canada are routinely evacuated to urban cities to await labour and birth; this is commonly referred to as Health Canada's evacuation policy. I produced two stand alone papers to investigate this policy. In the fisrt, I investigated the development and implementation of the Canadian government's evacuation policy. Archival research showed that the evacuation policy began to take shape in 1892 and was founded on Canada's goals to assimilate and civilize First Nations. My second paper employed First Nations feminist theory to understand why the evacuation policy does not result in good health, especially for the First Nations women. Because the evacuation policy is incongruent with First Nations' epistemologies, it compromises First Nations' health. I offer policy recommendations to promote First Nations health in a way that is consistent with Firsy Nations' espitemologies and goals towards self-determination and self-governance.
author2 Giles, Audrey R.
author Lawford, Karen
spellingShingle Lawford, Karen
First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves
author_facet Lawford, Karen
author_sort Lawford, Karen
title First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves
title_short First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves
title_full First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves
title_fullStr First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves
title_full_unstemmed First Nations Women's Evacuation during Pregnancy from Rural and Remote Reserves
title_sort first nations women's evacuation during pregnancy from rural and remote reserves
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26034
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26034
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