Indigenous perspectives on social policy [PowerPoint presentation]. Week Four. Social Work 4ZZ3: Social Welfare – Practice Implications and Advocacy, McMaster University. Retrieved from ___________You should use the information from the following lectures to write the reflection paper. I have uploaded the files so you can access the information. Four papers and a youtube video have been included that need to be incorporated. Everything has been uploaded but feel free to message me if you have any questions.Things you should know for writing the paper:Most of my papers get between 87-93%I am a mature student who has been working in the field of Social Work for over 12 years alreadyMost of my work centres around Domestic Violence, Addictions, Anti-Human Trafficking and the housing crisis and homeless. I have spent a lot of time working with Indigenous women and am recognizing the importance that policy work has in changing social workSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week One: Lecture One, September 3, 2024: Introduction to Social Welfare and the Implications for Practice and Advocacy – Mary VaccaroSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week Two: Lecture Two, September 10, 2024: Context, History, and Current Realities of the Social Welfare State in Canada – Mary VaccaroSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week 4: Lecture Four, September 24, 2024: Indigenous Perspectives on the Social Welfare System – Ashley SmokeSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week 5: Lecture Five, October 1, 2024: Understanding how narratives influence policy directives & the emotional toll of doing advocacy and change work – Mary VaccaroSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week 9: Lecture Nine, November 5, 2024: Understanding Power in Policy Advocacy & Social Change Work – Mary VaccaroSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week 10: Lecture 10, November 12, 2024: Techniques and Approaches for Social Policy Advocacy – Mary VaccaroPowermapping powerpointSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week 11: Lecture Eleven, November 19, 2024: The Role of Lived Experience in Policy Advocacy – Jelena VermillionSocial Work 4ZZ3: Week 12: Lecture 12, November 26, 2024: The Role of Hope in Policy Work: Imagining Better FuturesInformation provided by PowerPoint slideshow by Alexe Bernier: Thinking about girls’ activism: Challenging adultism, listening to Kids.PAPERS TO USE:Gates, A. B. (2017). “No One Will Speak for Us”: Empowering Undocumented Immigrant Women Through Policy Advocacy. Journal of Community Practice, 25(1),5-28. https://doi.org/10.1080/10705422.2016.1270244Cindy Blackstock opening statement to the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in 2013 | APTN News via You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWpqJSxq2D0Methods and Emerging Strategies to Engage People with Lived Experience Improving Federal Research, Policy, and Practice Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation U.S. Department of Health and Human Serviceshttps://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/62e7a64c60e10c47484b763aa9868f99/lived-experience-brief.pdfUploadedJoris De Corte & Rudi Roose (2020) Social work as a policy actor: understanding social policy as an open-ended democratic practice, European Journal of Social Work, 23:2, 227-238, DOI: 10.1080/13691457.2018.1462768Zine making as feminist pedagogy (uploaded)
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