Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies

Throughout history, First Nations children have been the subject of confused jurisdictional debates and unfair treatment by all levels of government. As a result, these children have been subjected to unspeakable harm, violence and neglect. In turn First Nations Child Welfare Agencies have attempted...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Clarke, Sarah
Language:English
Published: Indigenous Law Journal 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17132
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spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/17132 2023-05-15T16:14:00+02:00 Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies Clarke, Sarah 2007-10-01 114253 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17132 en_US eng Indigenous Law Journal 1703-4566 http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17132 Indigenous Law Journal 2007 ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:13:44Z Throughout history, First Nations children have been the subject of confused jurisdictional debates and unfair treatment by all levels of government. As a result, these children have been subjected to unspeakable harm, violence and neglect. In turn First Nations Child Welfare Agencies have attempted to address these issues and care for the children of their communities, bringing spiritual and cultural competence into the context of child protection. But the federal government has directly ensured their failure: unfair funding practices and unequal service provision has created a divide between the level of support and caring afforded to non-First Nations children and those children serviced by First Nations Child Welfare Agencies. This divide signifies a direct violation of a basic right often taken for granted by most Canadians: equality. Section 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms exists to protect our rights as equal citizens of this nation; in this instance the federal government has simply chosen to ignore this basic tenet. The unequal funding structure created to support First Nations children is a volatile reminder that First Nations across our country continue to be marginalized and relegated to being second class citizens. Other/Unknown Material First Nations University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
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language English
description Throughout history, First Nations children have been the subject of confused jurisdictional debates and unfair treatment by all levels of government. As a result, these children have been subjected to unspeakable harm, violence and neglect. In turn First Nations Child Welfare Agencies have attempted to address these issues and care for the children of their communities, bringing spiritual and cultural competence into the context of child protection. But the federal government has directly ensured their failure: unfair funding practices and unequal service provision has created a divide between the level of support and caring afforded to non-First Nations children and those children serviced by First Nations Child Welfare Agencies. This divide signifies a direct violation of a basic right often taken for granted by most Canadians: equality. Section 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms exists to protect our rights as equal citizens of this nation; in this instance the federal government has simply chosen to ignore this basic tenet. The unequal funding structure created to support First Nations children is a volatile reminder that First Nations across our country continue to be marginalized and relegated to being second class citizens.
author Clarke, Sarah
spellingShingle Clarke, Sarah
Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies
author_facet Clarke, Sarah
author_sort Clarke, Sarah
title Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies
title_short Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies
title_full Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies
title_fullStr Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies
title_full_unstemmed Ending Discrimination and Protecting Equality: A Challenge to the INAC Funding Formula of First Nations Child and Family Service Agencies
title_sort ending discrimination and protecting equality: a challenge to the inac funding formula of first nations child and family service agencies
publisher Indigenous Law Journal
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17132
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation 1703-4566
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17132
op_rights Indigenous Law Journal
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