原住民女工的演讲、写作和研究:儿童福利和非殖民化故事

IF 0.1 Q4 FAMILY STUDIES
Michelle Reid
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引用次数: 4

摘要

这项研究与戈尔德(1998)关于在儿童福利中促进主流女性社会工作者身心健康的研究类似。六名在原住民机构工作的原住民妇女儿童和家庭服务社(CFS)社会工作者与我聚在一起,分享我们在CFS经历中的个人和集体故事。我和原住民妇女讨论了我们的工作对我们整体健康的影响,我们如何应对这项工作,以及处理我们面临的问题的战略。这项研究概述了我们参与的研究过程,并从本质上将原住民女性CFS社会工作者在原住民环境中的挑战、韧性、创新和独特经验编织在一起。通过这些讨论,确定了五个主要主题。这项研究产生的五个主题包括双重责任的压力、不切实际的期望和多重角色的压力、关系强度带来的情感成本和收益、有意义的工作赋予力量的事实以及女性如何应对和保持整体健康。这项研究表明,今后有必要与民解社、社工社和原住民一起进行参与性研究。最终,本文谈到了在儿童福利系统和主流研究过程中改变原住民和非原住民之间长期殖民关系性质的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
First Nations Women Workers' Speak, Write and Research Back: Child Welfare and Decolonizing Stories
This research is a similar study to Gold’s (1998) study on the promotion of physical and mental health of mainstream female social workers in child welfare. Six First Nations women Child and Family Service (CFS) Social Workers (FNWCFSSW’s) who work in First Nations agencies gathered with me to share individual and collective stories about our CFS experiences. First Nations women and I discussed the impacts of our work on our holistic health, how we coped with the work, and strategies to deal with the issues that we face. This study outlines the research process that we engaged in, and, essentially weaves together the challenges, resilience, innovations, and unique experiences of First Nations women CFS Social Workers in a First Nations setting under a delegated authority model. As a result of these discussions five major themes were identified. The five themes that emerged from this study include the stress of dual accountability, the stresses of unrealistic expectations and multiple roles, the emotional costs and benefits of the intensity of the relationships, the fact that meaningful work gives strength and how the women coped and maintained their holistic health. This study reveals the important need for future participatory research to be conducted with FNWCFSSW and First Nations peoples. Ultimately, this paper speaks to the importance of changing the nature of along-term colonial relationship between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples within the child welfare system and in dominant mainstream research processes.
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