Volume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories

There are an increasing number of articles written by Indigenous and First Nations authors about their worldviews, cultures, research and ways of being and knowing in relation to Indigenous theories and pedagogies. As a result, their experiences, philosophies and approaches emphasize the increasing...

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Main Author: School of Native Human Services
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/1979
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OSUL.10219-19792013-08-09T05:38:30ZVolume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and TheoriesSchool of Native Human ServicesIndigenous Social Work Practices and TheoriesThere are an increasing number of articles written by Indigenous and First Nations authors about their worldviews, cultures, research and ways of being and knowing in relation to Indigenous theories and pedagogies. As a result, their experiences, philosophies and approaches emphasize the increasing borders for understanding the importance, value and rightful place of Indigenous theories and pedagogies in research, teaching and practice. Additionally, non-Indigenous authors are also writing messages of encouragement and support for Indigenous theories and pedagogies and highlight ways for non-Indigenous practitioners/teachers to reframe a worldview that incorporates Indigenous worldviews in a “good and respectful way”.2012-11-27T20:07:53Z2012-11-27T20:07:53Z2012-11-27Other1206-5323https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/1979en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
spellingShingle Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
School of Native Human Services
Volume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
description There are an increasing number of articles written by Indigenous and First Nations authors about their worldviews, cultures, research and ways of being and knowing in relation to Indigenous theories and pedagogies. As a result, their experiences, philosophies and approaches emphasize the increasing borders for understanding the importance, value and rightful place of Indigenous theories and pedagogies in research, teaching and practice. Additionally, non-Indigenous authors are also writing messages of encouragement and support for Indigenous theories and pedagogies and highlight ways for non-Indigenous practitioners/teachers to reframe a worldview that incorporates Indigenous worldviews in a “good and respectful way”.
author School of Native Human Services
author_facet School of Native Human Services
author_sort School of Native Human Services
title Volume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
title_short Volume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
title_full Volume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
title_fullStr Volume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
title_full_unstemmed Volume 8 Indigenous Social Work Practices and Theories
title_sort volume 8 indigenous social work practices and theories
publishDate 2012
url https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/1979
work_keys_str_mv AT schoolofnativehumanservices volume8indigenoussocialworkpracticesandtheories
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