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The Contradiction of Helping: Inuit Oppression(s) and Social Work in Nunavut
Authors:Patricia Johnston  Frank Tester
Affiliation:1. School of Social Work, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canadapatriciajohnston@live.ca;3. School of Social Work, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract:Significant differences in privilege, material resources, and decision-making power exist between Inuit and Qallunaat (or non-Inuit) in Canada’s Nunavut Territory. Holding serious implications, the disproportionate advantages afforded Qallunaat require an examination of the relationship between social work and the State (as employer). The role of credentialism and professionalism in the maintenance of neocolonial relations reveals a professional paradox and a barrier to pursing the objective of social justice within the profession. The transition experienced by Inuit—from a predominantly hunting culture to the logic of industrial capitalism—necessitates an examination of the role Qallunaat social workers have played and continue to practice within this transition and in the institutional structures that protect their interests.
Keywords:class  colonial  Inuit  neocolonial  Nunavut  power  privilege  professionalism  social work
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