2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2018.08.030
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Black parents ask for a second look: Parenting under ‘White’ Child Protection rules in Canada

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Cited by 42 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…We postulate that this may partially account for the relatively low number of Blacks who have reported hallucinogen use in their lifetime. Additionally, Black families have stricter rules for youth for their protection (Adjei & Minka, 2018;Cucchiara, 2020), typically in order to mitigate this disproportionate criminal justice response. This would also likely explain why Blacks who have used substances in the past year are more likely to be 26-34 years of age, rather than 18-25, as is the general trend among the remainder of ethnoracial groups.…”
Section: Use Of Psychedelics In Youthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We postulate that this may partially account for the relatively low number of Blacks who have reported hallucinogen use in their lifetime. Additionally, Black families have stricter rules for youth for their protection (Adjei & Minka, 2018;Cucchiara, 2020), typically in order to mitigate this disproportionate criminal justice response. This would also likely explain why Blacks who have used substances in the past year are more likely to be 26-34 years of age, rather than 18-25, as is the general trend among the remainder of ethnoracial groups.…”
Section: Use Of Psychedelics In Youthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…194, 242). Equally, in socially disadvantaged contexts there are still aspirations to "being a good mother" or "effective parenting", even if these do not always coincide with dominant social norms and may thus come into conflict with the youth welfare system (Adjei & Minka, 2018;Narciso et al, 2018). With this in mind, the link to the birth family may promise support in the light of biographical risks such as imminent homelessness, and is also associated with the hope that the relationship with the family could improve (Collins et al, 2008;Wade, 2008).…”
Section: Relationships With the Family Of Originmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The whiteness lens seeks to flatten attachment to a singular rather than complex, multi-varying series of relationships that differ but are equally valid. 94 Mercer is pointed in stating that attachment research has been based in Western European and North American habits and beliefs, adding to the question of validity when applied to Indigenous peoples and other populations that do not fit the "whiteness" frame. 95 Yet the discussion about the influence of factors such as culture and socioeconomic status is not new; it began in the mid-1990s, if not earlier.…”
Section: The Issue Of Culture and Attachment Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%