Article 30 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) sets out the rights of Indigenous and minority children to learn about and practice their own culture, religion, and language in countries where these practices are not shared by the majority of the population. The provisions of Article 30 are particularly relevant in nations such as Canada that are built upon a history of colonization, where for generations Indigenous children have been dispossessed of their cultures, languages, territories, family and community ties—all of the foundational elements of healthy and whole Indigenous identities. The colonization of the life-worlds of Indigenous children represents, in short, a primary mechanism through which nations have attempted to eliminate and assimilate the Indigenous populations within their borders, with devastating multi-generational consequences for surviving Indigenous peoples.
CITATION STYLE
Greenwood, M. (2016). Language, Culture, and Early Childhood: Indigenous Children’s Rights in a Time of Transformation. Canadian Journal of Children’s Rights / Revue Canadienne Des Droits Des Enfants, 3(1), 16–31. https://doi.org/10.22215/cjcr.v3i1.85
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