Aboriginal child protection

Aboriginal child protection

Aboriginal child protection describes services designed specifically for protection of the children of aboriginal or indigenous peoples, particularly where these peoples are a minority within a country. They may differ at international, national, legal, cultural, social, professional and program levels from general or mainstream child protection services. Fundamental human rights are a source of many of the differences. Aboriginal child protection may be an integral or a distinct aspect of mainstream services or it may be exercised formally or informally by an aboriginal people itself. There has been controversy about systemic genocide in child protection systems enforced with aboriginal children in post-colonial societies.

International

"In the second half of the twentieth century, removing children from their parents in order to change a people and a culture came to be recognized as an act of oppression, formally considered by the United Nations to be a form of genocide." [Andrew Armitage, "Comparing the Policy of Aboriginal Assimilation: Australia, Canada and New Zealand", UBC Press, Vancouver (1995), p. 6.] Many distinct aspects of aboriginal child protection are thus related to international human rights law [Domestic laws of nation-states may incorporate international norms; see next section.] including the 1951 "Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide", [Article 2 provides: "In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: … (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group." http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/p_genoci.htm, accessed 19 August 2008.] the 1976 "International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights", [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_ccpr.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] the 1986 "Declaration on Social and Legal Principles Relating to the Protection and Welfare of Children, with Special Reference to Foster Placement and Adoption Nationally and Internationally" [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/27.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] the 1989 "United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child", [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/k2crc.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] and the 2007 "United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples" [http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/512/07/PDF/N0651207.pdf?OpenElement, accessed 19 August 2008.] The latter Declaration provides: "Indigenous peoples have the collective right to live in freedom, peace and security as distinct peoples and shall not be subjected to any act of genocide or any other act of violence, including forcibly removing children of the group to another group." [Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Article 7(2), http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/512/07/PDF/N0651207.pdf?OpenElement, accessed 19 August 2008.] It is non-binding but may be persuasive even for those states that voted against it. [Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States; see http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2007/ga10612.doc.htm, accessed 19 August 2008.] Within countries, the expression of aboriginal child protection may be seen to be entangled with issues relating to the right of self-determination of indigenous peoples. ["International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights", Art. 1: "All peoples have the right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development." In Canada, this right may be constitutionally recognized, see: "Reference re Secession of Quebec", [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217, http://csc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/1998/1998rcs2-217/1998rcs2-217.html, accessed 21 August 2008.]

National

The domestic law of a country does not generally recognize an international law unless it is specifically introduced by the domestic law of that country. [E.g., Harold Hongju Koh, "Why Do Nations Obey International Law?", 106 Yale L.J. 2599 (1997).] This may occur by express statutory provision or by a domestic court having regard to an international norm as reflecting social progress. [E.g., "Mabo v Queensland [No2] ", (1992) 175 C.L.R. 1 (Aus.).] Even without being specifically introduced into domestic law, international norms may have political effects especially in countries that actively espouse human rights. [See: Ryan Goodman & Derek Jinks, "Toward an Institutional Theory of Sovereignty", 55 Stan. L. Rev. 1749, 1750 (2003), reviewed in Harold Hongju Koh, "Internalization through Socialization", 54 Duke L. J. 975, http://www.law.duke.edu/shell/cite.pl?54+Duke+L.+J.+975#H1N0, accessed 19 August 2008.] Aboriginal child protection issues tend to be prominent in countries colonized by a new majority population within the last few centuries. By the end of the twentieth century, assimilative policies were generally replaced in legislation, policy or practice by the Aboriginal Child Placement Principle which "outlines a preference for the placement of Aboriginal children with Aboriginal people when they are placed outside their families. The order of preference is generally that an Aboriginal child be placed: within the child’s extended family; or, if this is not possible, within the child’s Aboriginal community; and, failing that, with other Aboriginal people." [Law Reform Commission, New South Wales, Research Report 7 (1997) - The Aboriginal Child Placement Principle, http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lrc.nsf/pages/RR7CHP1, accessed 21 August 2008.] Versions of this principle refashioned aboriginal child protection in Western post-colonial democracies along lines shaped by constitutional responsibilities: state in Australia, federal in the United States, federal/provincial in Canada and national in New Zealand, with constitutionalized Treaties playing a pivotal role in New Zealand and an emerging role in Canada.

Australia

In Australia, “Traditionally, the Aboriginal family was a collaboration of clans composed of mothers, fathers, uncles, aunties, brothers, sisters, cousins and so on. This size of family was the norm but is recognised in today's terms as an 'extended family'.” [Yolanda Walker, “Aboriginal family issues”, Family Matters, Aug. 1993, p.51; http://www.aifs.gov.au/institute/pubs/fm1/fm35yw.html, accessed 20 August 2008.] In 1983, a Family Court worker noted: " [T] he strength of family affiliation goes a long way to explain the preservation of a distinct culture that has defied assimilation despite aggressive government policies for over a century." [Ruth Eversley, "The south-west aboriginal and family law", in Proc. Australian Family Research Conference, Canberra, 1983, v. 2: "Family law", Inst. Family Studies, Melbourne (1984), p. 135; http://www.popline.org/docs/0715/199030.html, accessed 20 August 2008.] Constitutionally, "The responsibility for legislating for children's welfare lies with each State and Territory Government in Australia." [The Aboriginal Child Placement Principle, New South Wales Law Reform Commission Research Report 7 (1997), [1998] AILR 13, http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/AILR/1998/13.html#Heading9, accessed 21 August 2008.] The Aboriginal Child Placement Principle was formulated in Australia in the 1990s. [Australian State Law Reform Commission, New South Wales, Research Report 7 (1997) - The Aboriginal Child Placement Principle, http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lrc.nsf/pages/RR7CHP1, accessed 21 August 2008.] Different child welfare legislation in each state and territory make it difficult to determine the effectiveness of the principle. [Australian State Law Reform Commission, New South Wales, Research Report 7 (1997) - The Aboriginal Child Placement Principle, http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lrc.nsf/pages/RR7CHP1, accessed 2 September 2008.] " [M] any Indigenous families prefer to make informal arrangements where possible for the care of children by extended family members. This distrust of the system is one of the reasons for the shortage of Indigenous carers in most jurisdictions in Australia." [Daryl Higgins, Leah Bromfield & Nick Richardson, "Enhancing Out-of-Home Care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Young People", Australian Institute of Family Studies, 2005. ISBN 0 642 395357, http://www.aifs.gov.au/nch/pubs/reports/empirical/empirical.html, accessed 3 September 2008.]

Canada

Child protection for aboriginal peoples of Canada has tended from Confederation in 1867 to fall between the chairs. Constitutional arrangements in Canada assigned "Indians" ["Indians" here includes Inuit; "In Re Eskimos", [1939] S.C.R. 104 (Can.).] to federal and child protection to provincial authorities. ["British North America Act, 1867", 30 & 31 Vic., (U.K.), c. 3, ss. 91(24) & 92(16); http://www.solon.org/Constitutions/Canada/English/ca_1867.html, accessed 19 August 2008.] Several generations of family life for many aboriginal peoples were devastated by a policy designed to "kill the Indian in the child" effectuated through a compulsory residential school program. [Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized for this policy: Hansard, Wednesday, June 11, 2008, "Apology to Former Students of Indian Residential Schools", http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?DocId=3568890&Language=E&Mode=1&Parl=39&Ses=2, accessed 19 August 2008.] In the 1960s, many aboriginal children were forcibly removed from their families and adopted by non-aboriginal parents. [This came to be known as "the Sixties Scoop"; see:Tom Lyons, Stolen Nation, http://www.wrcfs.org/repat/stolennation.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] In 1985, a Judge found that "Cultural genocide has been taking place in a systematic routine manner." [Edwin C. Kimelman, "No Quiet Place", Report of the Review Committee on Indian and Métis Adoptions and Placements (1985), aka the Kimelman Report.] During the 1980s, "First Nations peoples [took initiatives] in developing proposals of their own and in negotiating agreements with governments. ... First Nations peoples [developed] service models which reflect [ed] the experiences of their communities, cultures and histories." [Andrew Armitage, "Comparing the Policy of Aboriginal Assimilation: Australia, Canada and New Zealand", UBC Press, Vancouver (1995), p. 122.] In 1982, aboriginal rights were protected in the Canadian Constitution. ["Constitution Act, 1982", (Can.), s. 35(1): "The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed." http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/const/annex_e.html, accessed 21 August 2008.] Developments in case law suggest that since 1982 aboriginal peoples' rights to cultural integrity have been constitutionally protected. [Brian Slattery, "Generic and Specific Aboriginal Rights", p. 6, http://www.law.uvic.ca/calder/Papers/Brian%20Slattery.pdf, accessed 21 August 2008; and see: Brian Slattery, in "Let Right Be Done: Aboriginal Title, the Calder Case, and the Future of Indigenous Rights", Hamar Foster, Heather Raven and Jeremy Webber (eds.), UBC Press, Vancouver (2007). http://www.bsos.umd.edu/gvpt/lpbr/subpages/reviews/foster0708.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] Subsequently, some provinces enacted provisions and established policies for aboriginal child welfare agencies to provide services for aboriginal families on reserves under provincial law. [E.g., "Ontario, Child and Family Services Act", (1984), Part X; R.S.O. 1990, c. C. 11.] They depend upon federal funding. [Auditor General of Canada & Auditor general of British Columbia, Foreword in "Management of Aboriginal Child Protection Services", Ministry of Children and family Development (2008/2009), p. 2: "Funding for the services needs to match the requirements of the policies and also support the delivery of services that are culturally appropriate - which is known to take more time and resources. Current funding practices do not lead to equitable funding among Aboriginal and First Nations communities."] "Native agencies are bound by the same provincial child-welfare laws as their mainstream counterparts, but must survive on far tighter budgets under a strict federal funding formula that takes little account of provincial legislation." [Margaret Philp, "The land of lost children", The Globe and Mail, Saturday, December 21, 2002, p. F4; http://www.fact.on.ca/news/news0212/gm021221a.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] Currently, "The First Nations are engaged in a struggle to gain control of child welfare in their own communities, and this issue has a significant place in the First Nations movement towards self-determination." [Deena Marshall, Cindy Blackstock, Joyce Clouston Carlson & Marshall Fine, “From Child Welfare to Child, Family and Community Welfare: The Agenda of Canada’s Aboriginal Peoples”, in "Towards Positive Systems of Child And Family Welfare: International Comparisons of Child Protection, Family Service, and Community Caring Systems", Gary Cameron & Nancy Freymond, eds., University of Toronto Press, Toronto (2006), p. 211.] Indigenous peoples exercising the right of self-determination [E.g. Pimicikamak and the Anishinaabe Nation in Treaty #3.] have yet to make it fully effective in respect of aboriginal child protection.

China

China has numerous indigenous peoples that are designated national ethnic minorities. China is undergoing extraordinarily rapid economic growth and urbanization from a recent baseline of extreme poverty. Provincial, county and township governments have difficulty financing social services. ["Local governments still have many expenditure duties, but do not have the revenues to meet them. ... In some extreme cases, the tax collected is not even enough to cover the running costs of the local tax bureau. This makes it extremely difficult to maintain local infrastructure and sustain social services. See: China Development Brief, (25 January 2007), "Fiscal reform: Disentangling the public purse strings". http://www.chinadevelopmentbrief.com/node/969, accessed 22 August 2008.] In these circumstances, "The majority of protective children are abandoned and disabled. ... It is almost unimaginable that [a] child will be moved from the birthfamily due to child abuse and neglect by his or her birthparent(s)." [Huang Lihua, Chinese Adoption: Practices and Challenges", in Nick Frost (ed.), "Child Welfare: Major Themes in Health and Social Welfare", (2004), p. 121.] A 2005 study sponsored by the All-China Women's Federation, UNICEF and Peking University and supported by the government of China found that child abuse is widespread in China. ["China Daily", May 17, 2005, http://www.china.org.cn/english/2005/May/129038.htm, accessed 3 September 2008.] In the absence of state intervention to protect children within their families, aboriginal child protection tends to not be an issue. Ethnic minority families are exempted from the one-child policy, ["By 1979, with the national population close to 1 billion, the Chinese government imposed a policy to limit each family to a single child. Exceptions have been allowed only if a parent belongs to an ethnic minority or both parents are only children." See: http://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/~ipng/mecon/cases/Adoption.pdf, accessed 22 August 2008.] removing for ethnic minority populations one of the main reasons for child abandonment. In China, “Every ethnic group has the freedom to use its own spoken and written languages, and to retain or change its customs. ... [N] ational minorities exercise regional autonomy. Where national minorities live in compact communities autonomous organs of self-government are established…. The minority people … exercise autonomous rights, [are] masters in their own areas and administer the internal affairs of their ethnic group." [Regional Autonomy for Minority Peoples, http://id.china-embassy.org/eng/zggk/ssmz/t87302.htm, accessed 22 August 2008.] "Recent reform efforts in China's child welfare practices have focused on the importance of providing safe, permanent families for children in lieu of long-term institutional care. Although challenges still exist, adoption and foster care are increasingly being seen as viable alternatives for these children." [Huang Lihua, Chinese Adoption: Practices and Challenges", (2001) 80 Child Welfare, p. 529, http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-85404983.html, accessed 22 August 2008.] The combination of autonomous rights and absence of intrusive mainstream child protection services in China tends to defuse the principal driving forces underlying aboriginal child protection in other countries. Whether the recent influx of Han majority Chinese into Tibet may lead to aboriginal child protection issues seems unclear.

New Zealand

In New Zealand, social services established with the "Child Welfare Act" in 1925 "displayed little regard for the extended kin networks of Maori children." [Joy Swanson Ernst, "Whanau" Knows Best: Kinship Care in New Zealand", in "Kinship Foster Care: Policy, Practice and Research", Rebecca L. Hegar & Maria Scannapieco, eds., Oxford University Press, USA (1996), p. 117.] In 1955, New Zealand law retroactively abolished Maori customary adoptions. ["Adoption Act 1955", (NZ), s. 19, http://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1955/0093/latest/DLM292661.html?search=ts_act_adoption+act&sr=1, accessed 19 August 2008.] In 1982, a report recommended changes to the Department of Social Welfare to meet Maori needs. [Government of New Zealand, "The Report of the Ministerial Advisory Committee on a Maori Perspective for the Department of Social Welfare" (aka Puao-te-Ata-tu or Day Break), Wellington (1988), http://www.msd.govt.nz/documents/publications/msd/puaoteatatu.pdf, accessed 19 August 2008.] "The report's recommendations, all accepted by the then Minister, focus [ed] upon the need for the department to function in a bicultural manner and to share responsibility and authority for decisions with appropriate Maori people." [Waitangi Tribunal, http://www.waitangi-tribunal.govt.nz/scripts/reports/reports/414/83C6BC23-2BFB-4ED9-B165-7D1CD282AEA3.pdf, accessed 20 August 2008.] By the late 1980s, "notions of social work accountability, along with the pivotal role accorded family and whanau, had tipped the balance of care and protection work away from professionals. 'Family solutions to family problems', an important philosophy of child welfare work for many years, became more significant as family decision-making assumed importance." [Bronwyn Dalley, "Family Matters", Auckland University Press (1998), p. 321.] In 1989, New Zealand passed ground-breaking new legislation [The "Children, Young Persons, and Their Families Act 1989", (N.Z.).] , based on a philosophy of kinship care, that recognized "the importance of cultural identity in child protection policy." " [K] inship care in New Zealand is ... an effort to redress past practices that harmed and alienated Maori children and families." [Joy Swanson Ernst, "Whanau" Knows Best: Kinship Care in New Zealand", in "Kinship Foster Care: Policy, Practice and Research", Oxford University Press, New York (1999), Rebecca L. Hegar & Maria Scannapieco, eds., pp. 112-113.]

United States

Historically, in the United States "Indian tribes ... struggled against the assimilationist policies instituted by the United States which sought to destroy tribal cultures by removing Native American children from their tribes and families. In a stark example of such policies, the purpose articulated in the charter of the first boarding school in the 1890s on the Navajo reservation was 'to remove the Navajo child from the influence of his savage parents.'" [Introduction to the online edition of 'A Practical Guide to the Indian Child Welfare Act', http://www.narf.org/icwa/ch1.htm, accessed 19 August 2008.] In the 1960s, the federal government embarked on a new federal Indian policy of tribal self-determination. ["This new policy fosters tribal existence and self governance by allowing tribes to operate programs once operated solely by the federal government." See: http://www.narf.org/icwa/ch1.htm, accessed 19 August 2008.] "In view of this new policy and the problems facing tribes as a result of the loss of their children, the "Indian Child Welfare Act" was enacted in 1978." [The "Indian Child Welfare Act" was "the first U.S. policy document to state and explicit preference for kinship placement." Rebecca L. Hegar, "The Cultural Roots of Kinship Care", in "Kinship Foster Care: Policy, Practice and Research", Oxford University Press, New York (1999), Rebecca L. Hegar & Maria Scannapieco, eds., p. 17 at p. 22, citing L. Matheson, "The Politics of the Indian Child Welfare Act", 41 "Social Work" 232. " [The Act] established minimum federal jurisdictional, procedural and substantive standards aimed to achieve the dual purposes of protecting the right of an Indian child to live with an Indian family and to stabilize and foster continued tribal existence." See: "Introduction to the online edition of 'A Practical Guide to the Indian Child Welfare Act'", http://www.narf.org/icwa/ch1.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] Aboriginal child protection is now the subject of a body of federal law and programs. Through the Indian Health Service (IHS), the U.S. government provides "health services to more than 1.8 million Federally-recognized American Indians and Alaska Natives through a system of IHS, tribal, and urban ... operated facilities and programs based on treaties, judicial determinations, and Acts of Congress." [ Robert G. McSwain, testimony to the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, (2006), http://www.hhs.gov/asl/testify/t060315.html, accessed 19 August 2008.] The IHS is "the principal Federal health care provider and advocate for the health of American Indians and Alaska Natives". [Charles W. Grim, letter dated November 24, 2004, accompanying the IHS/BIA Child Protection Handbook; http://devbehavpeds.ouhsc.edu/assets/pdf/CPT/Dr.%20Grim%20Letter.pdf, accessed 19 August 2008.] As part of its services, the IHS administers the "Indian Child Abuse and Family Violence Prevention Act" [P.L. 101 630, Title IV (1990)(U.S.).] and with the Bureau of Indian Affairs offers model tribal laws for child protection codes on reservation. [Handbook for Indian Health Service & Bureau of Indian Affairs (U.S.), "Child Protection in Indian Country", http://devbehavpeds.ouhsc.edu/CPT.htm, accessed 19 August 2008.] These services, programs and codes may be culturally and linguistically as well as legally and politically differentiated from those of State-based Child Protective Services [citation needed] but, more generally, "Kinship care has become an integral program option along the continuum of service options in the child welfare system." [Maria Scannapieco, "Formal Kinship Care Practice Models", in "Kinship Foster Care: Policy, Practice and Research", Oxford University Press, New York (1999), Rebecca L. Hegar & Maria Scannapieco, eds., p. 71.]

Laws

Ultimately, child protection invokes the coercive power of the state. [Gary Cameron & Nancy Freymond, "Understanding International Comparisons of Child Protection,Family Service and Community Caring Systems of Child and Family Welfare", in "Towards Positive Systems of Child And Family Welfare: International Comparisons of Child Protection, Family Service, and Community Caring Systems", Gary Cameron & Nancy Freymond, eds., University of Toronto Press, Toronto (2006), p.5.] In a democracy such power is subject to the Rule of law. Many countries have written laws governing the exercise of state power for child protection. Indigenous peoples had organized societies and customary laws. [" [T] he fact is that when the settlers came, the Indians were there, organized in societies..." per Judson, J., in "Calder v. Attorney-General of British Columbia", [1973] S.C.R. 313 (Can.).] Indigenous peoples' customary laws are recognized and enforceable as part of the laws of post-colonial countries. [In "R. v Secretary of State For Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs", [1982] 2 All E.R. 118 (U.K.), Lord Denning said, "These customary laws are not written down. They are handed down by tradition from one generation to another. Yet beyond doubt they are well established and have the force of law within the community." In the U.S.A., "Customary law still appears in many of the decisions of American state and federal courts. Customary law, part and parcel of the English common law adopted and adapted by the Founders of the United States, recurs less often given that statutory and administrative law dominate the field. In contrast, the importance of customary law in American Indian tribal courts cannot be understated." Matthew L.M. Fletcher, "Rethinking Customary Law in Tribal Court Jurisprudence", http://works.bepress.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=matthew_fletcher, accessed 21 August 2008. In Canada, Williamson J. noted that "such rules, whether they result from custom, tradition, agreement, or some other decision making process, are 'laws' in the Dicey constitutional sense." "Campbell v. British Columbia", 2000 BCSC 1123 (Can.), http://www.courts.gov.bc.ca/jdb-txt/sc/00/11/s00-1123.htm, accessed 21 August 2008.] Inevitably, political tensions over the exercise of self-determination by aboriginal peoples find expression in legal tensions between indigenous, customary laws and post-colonial, written laws respecting child protection for aboriginal children. [See, e.g., Deena Marshall, Cindy Blackstock, Joyce Clouston Carlson & Marshall Fine, “From Child Welfare to Child, Family and Community Welfare: The Agenda of Canada’s Aboriginal Peoples”, in "Towards Positive Systems of Child And Family Welfare: International Comparisons of Child Protection, Family Service, and Community Caring Systems", Gary Cameron & Nancy Freymond, eds., University of Toronto Press, Toronto (2005).] Indigenous legal principles that reflect a more holistic worldview, and so give relatively greater emphasis to spiritual, cultural and relational needs in addition to physical needs of the child, may add to the legal differences.

Defining "Aboriginal"

As aboriginal child protection returns to its roots among aboriginal peoples, the question of who is aboriginal becomes increasingly pertinent. Aboriginal customs and colonial statutes were the two main sources of legal definitions of aboriginality. Aboriginal peoples were typically cohesive, numbering only hundreds or perhaps thousands, and collectively knew who they were. Their customary self-definitions may have been cultural rather than racial because some interbreeding was important for healthy genetic diversity. Colonial statutes were generally based on race or place. In Australia, "In his analysis of over 700 pieces of legislation, the legal historian John McCorquodale found no less than 67 different definitions of Aboriginal people." [John McCorquodale, "The Legal Classification of Race in Australia", (1986) 10 Aboriginal History p. 7; cited in John Gardiner-Garden, "The Definition of Aboriginality", Parliament of Australia, Research Note 18 2000-01, http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/RN/2000-01/01RN18.htm, accessed 22 August 2008.] In Canada, from its inception in 1876, the "Indian Act" ["Indian Act", R.S.C., 1985, c. I-5, http://lois.justice.gc.ca/en/showtdm/cs/I-5, accessed 22 August 2008.] established convoluted but essentially patrilineal definitions of "Indian", an exercise in gender discrimination that was eroded and finally eliminated by court decisions and statutory amendments in the 25 years following the 1982 Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. In Australia and Canada, where child protection laws affecting aboriginal families vary across states and provinces, availability of aboriginal child protection services tends to be defined by place. [I.e., by residence on Aboriginal or Indian reserves.]

Australia [text]

Canada

Three constitutionally undefined groups of aboriginal peoples [The Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada.] have constitutional rights in Canada. ["Constitution Act, 1982", s. 35(2), http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/const/annex_e.html, accessed 3 September 2008.] Of these, only the "Indian" peoples are statutorily defined for administrative purposes. ["Indian Act", R.S.C., 1985, c. I-5, http://lois.justice.gc.ca/en/showtdm/cs/I-5, accessed 3 September 2008; it is a basic principle of law that the statutory definition cannot affect the constitutional meaning.] In general, aboriginal peoples in Canada continue to have the right to define themselves for their own purposes and such definitions may have wider application. In 1999, Pimicikamak, a Canadian aboriginal people, enacted a citizenship law ["The Pimicikamak Citizenship Law, 1999", http://www.pimicikamak.ca/law/LAWoCITf.DOC, accessed 22 August 2008.] based on self-identification, acceptance by the people, and objective verifiability. [The government of Canada objected to, but subsequently accepted, this law.] In 2003, the Supreme Court of Canada prescribed three similar criteria for determining who is a member of a Métis people, ["R. v. Powley", [2003] 2 S.C.R. 207, http://csc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/2003/2003scc43/2003scc43.html, accessed 22 August 2008.] reflecting the customary aboriginal definition (with the addition of objective verifiability, which was not an issue in the pre-colonial context).

China [text]

New Zealand [text] ["The Waitangi Tribunal was established in 1975 by the "Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975". The Tribunal is a permanent commission of inquiry charged with making recommendations on claims brought by Maori relating to actions or omissions of the Crown that breach the promises made in the Treaty of Waitangi." http://www.waitangi-tribunal.govt.nz/, accessed 20 August 2008.]

United States [text]

Bicultural Services

Except where mandated and provided distinctly from mainstream child protection, aboriginal child protection is necessarily provided through some form of bicultural services. This gives rise to issues of cultural competence.

Australia [text]

Canada [text]

China [text]

New Zealand [text]

Standards

While constitutional arrangements, legal definitions and statutory schemata vary among those Western post-colonial countries where aboriginal child protection issues have most notably emerged, standards for aboriginal child protection tend to converge. Whether mainstream or aboriginal, child protection agencies tend to be professional and to aim for best practice standards. Best practice is implicit in identifying the best interests of the child, the almost universal mantra of modern child welfare statutory mandates and professional practice. Best practice is evidence based; knowledge of the evidence accepts no borders.

Notes


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