Prologue
Introduction
1. The Bleeding Heart of Settler Colonialism
Indigenous Legal Orders and the Indian Act
From wáhkôhtowin to Transracial Adoption
2. Adoptive Kinship and Belonging
Gender and Family Life in Cree Métis Saskatchewan
The Emergence of the Euro-Canadian Adoption Paradigm
Indigenous Adoption and Euro-Canadian Law
3. Rehabilitating the "Subnormal [Métis] Family" in Saskatchewan
4. The Green Lake Children’s Shelter Experiment: From Institutionalization to Integration in Saskatchewan
The Social Work Profession and the Rationalized Logics of Indigenous Child Removal in Saskatchewan
5. Post-War Liberal Citizenship and the Colonization of Indigenous Kinship
The 1951 Indian Act Revisions and the rise of "Jurisdictional Disputes"
6. Child Welfare as System and Lived Experience
Adopting a Solution to the Indian Problem
7. Saskatchewan’s Indigenous Resurgence and the Restoration of Indigenous Kinship and Caring
8. Confronting Cultural Genocide in the 1980s
Conclusion: Intimate Indigenization
Epilogue: Coming Home
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Interviews
Newspapers
Government Documents
Statues, Regulations, and Court Cases
Statutes of Canada
Saskatchewan Statues
Statutes of the United States
Archival Series
Printed Government Documents
Canada. Department of Citizenship and Immigration. Indian Affairs Branch. Annual Reports, 1950–1965
Printed Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Websites
Allyson D. Stevenson is an assistant professor in the
Department of Politics and International Studies at the University
of Regina.
"While the process of Truth and Reconciliation in Canada has raised
awareness about residential schooling, what remains less known is
the equally devastating systemic and ongoing assault on Indigenous
children through the child welfare system. Allyson D. Stevenson
thoroughly maps out this truth, shedding new light on the role of
the state in causing multigenerational trauma to Indigenous
families."--Kim Anderson, Canada Research Chair in Indigenous
Relationships, University of Guelph, author of A Recognition of
Being: Reconstructing Native Womanhood
" Intimate Integration is politically sharp, carefully researched,
and intellectually generous. Allyson D. Stevenson transforms how we
see modern Canadian colonialism and the range of ways that
Indigenous people have resisted and rebuilt in the face of
it."--Adele Perry, Department of History and Women's and Gender
Studies, University of Manitoba
"Deftly weaving together academic training in history and lived
experience as a Métis adoptee, Allyson D. Stevenson provides a
path-breaking, powerful, eye-opening study that is essential
reading for Canadians seeking to understand the trauma of child
removal on Indigenous families and communities as well as their
resistance and resilience." --Sarah Carter, Department of History
and Classics, University of Alberta
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