http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23986898
Resituating the ethical gaze: government morality and the local worlds of impoverished Indigenous women.
Source
Department of Psychiatry, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Over
generations, government policies have impacted upon the lives of
Indigenous peoples of Canada in unique and often devastating ways. In
this context, Indigenous women who struggle with poverty, mental
illness, trauma and substance abuse are among the most vulnerable, as
are Indigenous children involved in child welfare systems.
OBJECTIVE:
By
examining the life history of Wanda, a First Nations woman, this
article examines the intergenerational role that government policies
play in the lives of impoverished Indigenous women and their families.
Questions of moral governance and responsibility and the need for ethical policies are raised.
DESIGN:
The
life narrative presented in this article is part of a larger
qualitative research programme that has collected over 100 life
histories of Indigenous women with addictions and who have involvement
with the child welfare system, as children or adults. Wanda's life story
exemplifies the impact of government policies that is characteristic of
vulnerable Indigenous women and draws attention to the lack of ethical standards in government policymaking in child welfare, public health and mental health/addictions.
RESULTS:
The
path to recovery for Canadian Indigenous women in need of treatment for
co-occurring mental disorders and substance addiction is too frequently
characterized by an inadequate and ever shifting continuum of care. For
those who feel intimidated, suspicious or have simply given up on
seeking supports, a profound invisibility or forgetting of their
struggle exists in areas of government policy and programming provision.
Living outside the scope of mental health and addiction priorities,
they become visible to the human service sector only if they become
pregnant, their parenting draws the attention of child and family
services (CFS), they need emergency health care, or are in trouble with
the law. The intergenerational cycle of substance abuse, mental illness
and poverty is commonly associated with child welfare involvement,
specifically practices that place the health and well-being of
Indigenous children at risk. In order to break this cycle, close
attention to implementation of ethically based policies and best
practice interventions is required.
CONCLUSIONS:
From an ethical
policy perspective, the focus of government policies and the practices
they generate must be first and foremost to ensure that individuals,
families and groups are not left worse off than prior to a government
policy impacting upon their life. Furthermore, the impact of living a
life determined by multiple government policies should not be a story of
individual and family devastation, and government policies should not
be the most significant determinant of health for any group of people.
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