Sentences with phrase «cultural security»

I will continue to work with the Australian Government to promote cultural security as they make efforts to improve engagement.
Governments also have an obligation to ensure cultural security in service delivery and cultural competency of their staff working in our communities.
The key lesson that can be drawn from this body of literature is that creating cultural security through cultural competency is not something that an agency or organisation can simply purchase off a shelf.
Economic and cultural security help make that possible for the individual, perhaps.
The importance of cultural security for Indigenous children is at the centre of a call to action issued by delegates at an international Indigenous health conference in Melbourne this week....
Cultural Security recognises that this is not an optional strategy, nor solely the responsibility of individuals, but rather involves society and system levels of involvement.
This model distinguishes between cultural awareness, cultural safety and cultural security which Coffin argues have been inappropriately interchanged.
An ideal educational program that protects the national identity and heritage of states while being globally inclusive and promoting cultural security and understanding should include the following eight features:
He further advocated that the issue of cultural security and the barriers that Aboriginal people face in using health services are important in any debate about funding Aboriginal primary health care.
For example, China established a new national security committee earlier this year and it has included «cultural security,» «regime security,» and «information security» as part of Chinese national security.
In this context human needs extends to include concepts of distributive justice, identity and cultural security.
However, as with «cultural security», none of the available cultural respect literature provides direction on how cultural training will achieve this goal.
Now whenever anything with the young Mums arises there is an established point of contact to the older women first — thus an assurance is created for cultural security.
Cultural Security is built from the acknowledgement that theoretical «awareness» of culturally appropriate service provision is not enough.
To meet these responsibilities governments, NGOs and industry must be sufficiently culturally competent to act in accordance with Juli Coffin's model of cultural security that I outlined earlier in the Chapter.
This reveals the mutually reinforcing character of Indigenous employment and cultural competency and cultural security.
Cultural Security is proposed to effect change in all elements of the health system workforce development, workforce reform, purchasing of health services, monitoring and accountability, and public engagement.
Cultural security is subtly different from cultural safety and imposes a stronger obligation on those that work with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples to move beyond «cultural awareness» to actively ensuring that cultural needs are met for individuals.
She argues that awareness and safety mechanisms need to be supported by brokerage and protocols to progress to cultural security.
As Chapters 3 and 4 will outline in greater detail, the cure must start with healing, empowerment and cultural security.
This includes the stalled efforts to reconciliation (hopefully reignited by the recently offered National Apology to the Stolen Generations), and the ongoing uncertainty surrounding the issues of land, control of resources, cultural security, the rights of self - determination and sovereignty.
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