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Journal article

First Nations, Maori, American Indians, and Native Hawaiians as Sovereigns: EAP with Indigenous Nations Within Nations

Abstract

Indigenous workforces have existed across the world since the creation of Earth. What has changed is the evolution of multicultural societies, governments, and landscapes that have become part of, or sit parallel to, sovereign Indigenous nations and their workforces. An international response to Employee Assistance Programming (EAP) and workplace health will be shared from various Indigenous groups across the globe. These societies include the Maori of New Zealand, First Nations of Canada, American Indian groups from the U.S. mainland, and Native Hawaiians. Guidelines for EAP practice include the discussion of historical trauma, communication skills, confidentiality, and environmental issues. Theoretical underpinnings for health sovereignty are shared through ancient teachings of Indigenous philosophies and their relationships to contemporary EAP development and utilization.

Authors

Haring RC; Hudson M; Erickson L; Taualii M; Freeman B

Journal

Journal of Workplace Behavioral Health, Vol. 30, No. 1-2, pp. 14–31

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

April 3, 2015

DOI

10.1080/15555240.2015.998969

ISSN

1555-5240

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