Blog & Media Coverage

Search the blog using the search bar below.

Latest Blog Posts

What could implementing Indigenous rights in BC’s mental health law look like?
Decolonizing Malachite Goudie-Groat Decolonizing Malachite Goudie-Groat

What could implementing Indigenous rights in BC’s mental health law look like?

UNDRIP is not a magic bullet that will dismantle centuries of colonization and genocide, but it is an important tool that helps provide a baseline for the implementation of Indigenous rights in a meaningful way. When combined with the implementation of other human rights-based principles, BC can create a baseline for a mental health law that protects human rights and wellness for Indigenous people.

Read More
Colonialism, resistance, and mental health inequities
Decolonizing Malachite Goudie-Groat Decolonizing Malachite Goudie-Groat

Colonialism, resistance, and mental health inequities

Current mainstream conceptions of mental health and mental health treatment have roots in colonialism, and those roots shape mental health services today. Yet, in the face of genocide, colonization, and racism, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit people have and continue to resist the systemic suppression of Indigenous community and centre understandings of health and wellbeing.

Read More
Questionnaire will inform new BC anti-racism legislation
Malachite Goudie-Groat Malachite Goudie-Groat

Questionnaire will inform new BC anti-racism legislation

This legislation this questionnaire will inform aims to hold the government accountable for systemic racism in its programs and services and to offer supports to people who have experienced negative impacts from systemic racism. One area where we know systemic racism happens is when people receive involuntary care under the Mental Health Act and are detained in hospital and treated against their will.

Read More
National Day for Truth and Reconciliation: The Right to Health
Malachite Goudie-Groat Malachite Goudie-Groat

National Day for Truth and Reconciliation: The Right to Health

Colonialism has interrupted ways of sharing knowledge, families, communities, cultural land-based practices, and languages, all of which are important for health and wellness. There is no shortage of recommendations and guidance on what we need to do to support reconciliation related to health; we need to take action to implement them.

Read More

Featured Blog Posts

Media Coverage