Indigenous child welfare
Canada has a decentralized child welfare system that consists of 13 Canadian provincial and territorial child welfare systems. In addition, there exists Métis, First Nations and urban Indigenous child and family service agencies that are to varying degrees affected by federal policies and funding models.
Most commonly, Indigenous child welfare agencies have signed agreements with either the federal or both the federal and provincial governments that authorizes them to provide the full range of child protection services and receive federal funding to do so.
For more information about First Nations child welfare, see Denouncing the Continued Overrepresentation of First Nations Children in Canadian Child Welfare.
- Canadian Human Rights Tribunal on First Nations Child Welfare
- Jordan's Principal
- Overrepresentation in Context
For information on the First Nations human rights complaint case against the federal government for under-funding child welfare services on-reserve: I am a witness.
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Information Sheet
New Brunswick’s child welfare system
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Information Sheet
Newfoundland and Labrador’s child welfare system
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Information Sheet
Northwest Territories' child welfare system
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Information Sheet
Nunavut's child welfare system
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Book chapter
On the Matter of Cross-Cultural Aboriginal Adoptions
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Book
Putting a Human Face on Child Welfare: Voices from the Prairie
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Book chapter
Reconciliation: Rebuilding the Canadian Child Welfare System to Better Serve Aboriginal Children and Youth
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Journal article
Reflections of a Mi’kmaq social worker on a quarter of a century work in First Nations child welfare
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Journal article
Residential Schools: Did They Really Close or Just Morph Into Child Welfare?
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Information Sheet
Saskatchewan's child welfare system
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