Abstract
This study examines the Building a Nation organization which provided health services (therapy and counselling) in downtown Saskatoon, with a large base of Indigenous clients. This study looks at BAN’s therapeutic Medicine Wheel approach that argues for the importance of historical and social context in assessing a person's health. This methodology suggests healing (mental, spiritual, emotional) as a lifelong process that requires a holistic approach that should be more broadly implemented at a community level. This study demonstrates avenues of healing by incorporating Indigenous worldviews and perspectives on health in its model; the methods and evidence contained within this study can provide context and direction when considered in the rehabilitative application of Gladue Rights.
Publication Information
Waldram, James, Robert Innes, Marusia Kaweski, and Calvin Redman. "Building A Nation: Healing in an Urban Context." In Aboriginal Healing in Canada: Studies in Therapeutic Meaning and Practice. Ed. James B. Waldram. Ottawa: Aboriginal Healing Foundation, 2008.
Publication Date
2008
Primary Resource
Secondary
Resource Type
Documents
File