2021
DOI: 10.1093/bjsw/bcab222
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A reinterrogation of South African child welfare discourse: A case for decolonisation?

Abstract: Relying on discourse analysis and critical social work, this article explores the relevance of a decolonisation discourse to South African child welfare. A child welfare discourse of coloniality emerges from Australia, New Zealand and Canada. This emphasises the role that colonisation has played in eradicating indigenous persons or alternately assimilating subjugated populations to Western norms and sensibilities and maintains that coloniality persists in contemporary child welfare. South African child welfare… Show more

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“…Furthermore, distinguishing between generations within families was also key to colonial policy interventions seeking to save and civilize (Cunneen, 2008). Most notably, child removal policies were in operation in multiple colonies, and for many decolonial scholars, effectively remain ongoing given the disproportionate numbers of indigenous children taken into state care (Mohamud et al, 2021; Nyamu and Wamahiu, 2022; Schmidt, 2022).…”
Section: A Decolonial Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, distinguishing between generations within families was also key to colonial policy interventions seeking to save and civilize (Cunneen, 2008). Most notably, child removal policies were in operation in multiple colonies, and for many decolonial scholars, effectively remain ongoing given the disproportionate numbers of indigenous children taken into state care (Mohamud et al, 2021; Nyamu and Wamahiu, 2022; Schmidt, 2022).…”
Section: A Decolonial Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%