Child and Youth Care across Sectors aims to reflect the changing field by capturing a diverse array of themes and issues through an inclusive framework. In Volume 2, the contributors continue the discussion on sectors and contexts of child and youth care, with an emphasis on giving space and voice to different ways of thinking about and describing the field. Focusing on acknowledging and confronting the complex issues within child and youth care, this new volume includes groundbreaking chapters on pertinent topics from homelessness to immigration, antiracism, African-centred praxis, and Indigenous ways of being. Expanding from the first volume, this text explores additional settings of child and youth care, including hospitals, schools, day treatment programs, and the complicated youth criminal justice sector.
As the field of child and youth care continues to evolve, this timely and thought-provoking text will be vital for students, scholars, and practitioners in child and youth care, in Canada and abroad.
FEATURES
incorporates discussions on Canada’s northern provinces and territories, specifically Labrador and Nunavut, in child and youth care contexts and regions typically neglected in the field
includes chapters centering Indigenous ways of being and thinking, written by Indigenous scholars
Introduction: Moving Beyond Child and Youth Care Orthodoxies, by Kiaras GharabaghiandGrant Charles
Chapter 1: Being Indigenous Is Not a Risk Factor: A Sisters Rising Story of Resurgence and Sovereignty, by Sandrina deFinney, Anna Chadwick, Chantal Adams, Shantelle Moreno, Angela Scott, andShezell Rae Sam
Chapter 2: Mino-Bimaadiziwin Wiidookodaadiwag (Helping Each Other through the Good Life): Implications for Research and Practice with Indigenous Communities, by Nicole Ineese-Nash
Chapter 3: Towards a Framework of African-Centred Child and Youth Care Praxis, by Julian Hasford, Peter Amponsah, Travonne Edwards, andJuanita Stephen
Chapter 4: Newcomer, Immigration, and Settlement Sectors, by Francis Hare
Chapter 5: Youth Homelessness and Shelter Settings, by Hans Skott-Myhre
Chapter 6: Child and Youth Care in the North, by Heather Modlin, Kelly Shaw, Sheldon Lane, andJennifer Oliver
Chapter 7: Child and Youth Care Practice in Hospital Settings, by Agnes QuittardandGrant Charles
Chapter 8: School-Based Child and Youth Care Practice: A Case Study of Ontario, by Saira Batasar-JohnieandKiaras Gharabaghi
Chapter 9: Child and Youth Care Practice in Day Treatment Settings, by Jessica CarriereandKiaras Gharabaghi
Chapter 10: Child and Youth Care and the Youth Criminal Justice System, by Grant CharlesandAshley Quinn
Chapter 11: The Other, Forgotten, Hidden, Current, and Future Settings of Child and Youth Care Practice, by Kiaras GharabaghiandGrant Charles
Conclusion: Expansion and Consolidation: Where to from Here?, by Kiaras GharabaghiandGrant Charles
About the Contributors
Biography
Kiaras Gharabaghi is a Professor in the School of Child and Youth Care and Dean of the Faculty of Community Services at Ryerson University, specializing in child and youth care ethics, organizational change, residential care and treatment, and international practice. He has over 20 years of front-line experience in the child mental health, child welfare, and youth homelessness sectors.
Grant Charles is an Associate Professor in the School of Social Work and an affiliated faculty member in the Division of Adolescent Health and Medicine in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of British Columbia. His research specializes in child and youth mental health and child welfare. He currently sits on several editorial boards, including the International Journal of Child, Youth and Family Studies and the Journal of Advances in Mental Health..
“Meaningful and unsettling conversations are essential for change, and this volume is a tool to start those dialogues. The need for BIPOC perspectives in the CYC field cannot be understated, and this text seeks to include those voices, challenging CYCPs to examine their approach and encouraging growth of the field. Hopefully, CYCPs who identify as BIPOC will see themselves reflected within this text and will imagine, dream, and write, sharing their approaches that are deeply imbedded in their own worldview, which in turn will centre the worldview of the young people we work with.”
—Cherylanne James, CYCP, Indigenous Perspectives Professor, Fleming College
“The field of child and youth care is diverse and evolving. In this era of Truth and Reconciliation in Canada, Institutions are challenged with decolonizing, indigenizing, and being responsive to the diversity of children, youth, and communities we serve. The works in this volume are valuable for everyone in this field.”
—Nicholas XEMŦOLTW̱ Claxton, PhD, School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria
“Volume 2 is a wonderful addition to the child and youth care literature. It expands on the many sectors of child and youth care practice from the perspective of those closest to it. This volume so eloquently captures the depth and breadth of child and youth care in Canada. It is a critical and honest look at the historical roots and present-day implications. The examples and case studies highlight the progress of our profession as well as the ongoing challenges. A must-read for students in post-secondary.”
—David Connolly, MEd, Professor, Child and Youth Care Program, Seneca College
Instructor Resources
The supplementary materials supplied along with Child and Youth Care across Sectors, Vol. 2 serve the purpose of stimulating discussions and critical reflections on many of the themes embedded within or across the chapters. Discussion topics and specific questions suitable for student assignments have been divided along three core streams:
Critical reflection
Professional and career development
Practice
In addition, tips have been provided on which activities/questions may be more suitable for individual student activities or assignments and which might lend themselves to group activities or assignments.
Contact your rep to view a supplement sample or request a download code.
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