Unveiling injustice: Disrupting child removal policies and upholding breastfeeding: An emancipatory framework

Author:

Peek Amanda1ORCID,Hamilton Sharynne1,Atchan Marjorie1,Jojo Natasha1,Northam Holly1

Affiliation:

1. University of Canberra Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

Abstract

AbstractBefore colonization, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities had nurturing, holistic, and communitarian approaches that promoted extended and healthy lives for their children. Colonization, marked by policies of genocide and assimilation, has resulted in an alarming overrepresentation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children under the care of child protection agencies, resulting in compromised health outcomes and reduced life expectancies. We are conducting a study designed to enhance positive developmental outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children by articulating and enabling the rights of mothers and children to breastfeed in the context of a child protection intervention and child removal. To understand and address this problem, it is critical to implement culturally safe, de‐colonized, emancipatory research that is guided by and benefits Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. This article presents an emancipatory framework that we are applying to our study using an Aboriginal participatory action research approach, that serves as a guide for non‐Indigenous researchers seeking to conduct research with Indigenous communities. We emphasize the importance of incorporating an Aboriginal participatory action research framework, using community consultation and codesign; culturally secure data collection methods, and paying attention to Indigenous data sovereignty. Developing trusting respectful relationships is conducive to knowledge acquisition, exchange, and use, when research approaches deeply rooted in community involvement are applied. A call to action by the critical midwifery studies collective, urges non‐Indigenous researchers to become accountable allies that demonstrates respect for community leadership while actively striving to ensure research does not perpetuate further harm, and produces effective change. This article provides an overview of ways to conduct ethical emancipatory research with Indigenous participants, that is, of benefit to midwifery practitioners and is applicable to many areas of research, policy, and practice.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference64 articles.

1. Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission.Bringing them home: Report of the national inquiry into the separation of aboriginal and torres strait islander children from their families.1997.

2. The modernising of the indigenous domestic moral economy

3. Mind The Gap, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cardiovascular Health: A Narrative Review

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