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1.
J Aging Stud ; 63: 100930, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36462910

ABSTRACT

In this article, we re-vision Anishinaabe, crip and queer futures of aging against and beyond dominant successful aging narratives by drawing on our archive of digital/multimedia videos (short documentaries) produced in conjunction with older/e/Elder persons and the Re•Vision: Centre for Art and Social Justice. These documentaries are directed and come from the lives of those older and e/Elder persons whose aging embodiments intra-sect with their Indigenous, disabled and queer selves. Disrupting hegemonic successful aging narratives, and specifically heteronormative and ableist trajectories of aging, these alternative renderings of aging futures offer rich, affective relationalities and cyclical timescapes of older experience that draw on the past even as they reach into divergent futurities. Anishinaabe, crip and queer aging emerge. While we discern resonances in relationalities and temporalities among and between the Anishinaabe and non-Indigenous stories, we also identify significant differences across accounts, indicating that they cannot be collapsed together. Instead, we argue for holding different life-ways and futures alongside one another, following the 1613 Two Row Wampum Treaty between the Dutch and the Haudenosaunee, in which each party promised to respect the other's ways, and committed to non-interference, as well as to the development and maintenance of relationship.


Subject(s)
Sexual and Gender Minorities , Humans , Aged , Aging , Narration , Ethnicity , Social Justice
2.
Psychol Serv ; 10(1): 12-23, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22924803

ABSTRACT

This study is an evaluation of pre-postprogram change associated with the High Intensity Family Violence Prevention Program (HIFVPP) for incarcerated male offenders who are perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV). The sample consists of 159 male offenders who participated in the HIFVPP while incarcerated. Participants were assessed pre-, mid-, and postprogram using an assessment battery consisting of self-report questionnaires and facilitator-rated evaluation scales. Results found uniform and significant (p < .001) improvement for pre- and postprogram change in the self-report questionnaires and in the facilitator ratings. A positive improvement in motivation, whether assessed by the participant or facilitator, was associated with improvement in program outcomes and significant within, between, and interaction effects were found when participant program performance over time was compared among grouped postprogram ratings of motivation. The implication for the efficacy of addressing offender motivation to change in IPV interventions is discussed.


Subject(s)
Criminals/psychology , Motivation , Motivational Interviewing , Program Evaluation/statistics & numerical data , Spouse Abuse/rehabilitation , Adolescent , Adult , Aggression/psychology , Canada , Child , Female , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Prisoners/education , Prisoners/psychology , Risk Factors , Self Report , Spouse Abuse/prevention & control , Spouse Abuse/psychology , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
3.
J Interpers Violence ; 27(6): 1176-96, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22203614

ABSTRACT

The following study is an evaluation of the Moderate Intensity Family Violence Prevention Program (MIFVPP). The sample consisted of 298 male federal offenders who participated in the MIFVPP while incarcerated or on release within the community. Participants were assessed pre-, mid-, and postprogram using an assessment battery consisting of self-report questionnaires and facilitator-rated evaluation scales. Results of the study found uniform and significant (p < .001) improvement for pre and post program change in the self-report questionnaires and in the facilitator ratings. A positive improvement in motivation, whether assessed by the participant or facilitator, was associated with improvement in program outcomes and significant within, between, and interaction effects were found when participant program performance over time was compared among grouped postprogram ratings of motivation. The implication for the efficacy of addressing offender motivation to change in intimate partner violence (IPV) interventions is discussed.


Subject(s)
Mental Health Services , Motivation , Prisoners/psychology , Spouse Abuse/psychology , Spouse Abuse/therapy , Adult , Aggression/psychology , Canada , Counseling/methods , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Self Report , Spouse Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
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