Residential Schools and Indigenous Peoples

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Boarding School Experiences
Boarding School Survivors
Boarding School System
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child removal practices
colonial education systems
colonising societies
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Common Language
comparative indigenous histories
cultural assimilation policies
Education System
educational policy
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history of education
Indian Residential School
indigenous child institutionalisation case studies
Indigenous Children
Indigenous Students
Industrial School System
Industrial Schools
intergenerational trauma
Jacinda Ardern
Kalaallit Nunaat
neglect
NSW Government
Pope Paul III
postcolonial studies
reconciliation
Residential School History
Residential Schooling Systems
Residential Schools
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Te Aute
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Torres Strait Islander Children
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Waitangi Tribunal

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032088389
  • Weight: 353g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Residential Schools and Indigenous Peoples provides an extended multi-country focus on the transnational phenomenon of genocide of Indigenous peoples through residential schooling. It analyses how such abusive systems were legitimised and positioned as benevolent during the late nineteenth century and examines Indigenous and non-Indigenous agency in the possibilities for process of truth, restitution, reconciliation, and reclamation.

The book examines the immediate and legacy effects that residential schooling had on Indigenous children who were removed from their families and communities in order to be ‘educated’ away from their ‘savage’ backgrounds, into the ‘civilised’ ways of the colonising societies. It brings together Indigenous and non-Indigenous authors from Aotearoa/New Zealand, Australia, Greenland, Ireland, Norway, the United Kingdom, and the United States in telling the stories of what happened to Indigenous peoples as a result of the interring of Indigenous children in residential schools.

This unique book will appeal to academics, researchers, and postgraduate students in the fields of Indigenous studies, the history of education and comparative education.

Stephen James Minton is a British chartered psychologist and an Associate Professor in Applied Psychology at the School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, UK.