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  1. Jun 22, 2016 · The “Sixties Scoop” refers to the large-scale removal or “scooping” of Indigenous children from their homes, communities and families of birth through the 1960s, and their subsequent adoption into predominantly non-Indigenous, middle-class families across the United States and Canada.

  2. The Sixties Scoop was an era in Canadian child welfare between the late 1950s to the early 1980s, in which the child welfare system removed Indigenous children from their families and communities in large numbers and placed them in non-Indigenous foster homes or adoptive families, institutions, and residential schools.

  3. May 13, 2022 · The Sixties Scoop refers to the time period, primarily throughout the 1960s when Indigenous children were taken or “scooped away” from their birth families and communities, usually without the consent o f their family and band. The term was coined by Patrick Johnson in his 1983 report on Indigenous children in the Child Welfare system.

  4. Learn about the Sixties Scoop, the mass removal of Aboriginal children from their families into the child welfare system in the 1960s and 1970s. Explore the causes, consequences, and responses to this legacy of colonialism and racism.

  5. Aug 23, 2016 · The ’60s Scoop was a practice of removing thousands of First Nations, Métis and Inuit children from their families and placing them with non-aboriginal families from the 1960s to the 1980s. Survivors of the ’60s Scoop are seeking justice and recognition for the cultural genocide they suffered and the damages they incurred.

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  6. Apr 26, 2023 · Learn about the Sixties Scoop, a policy that removed thousands of Indigenous children from their homes and adopted them out to non-Indigenous families in Canada and the US. Find out the impacts, apologies and settlements of this historical injustice.

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  8. The Sixties Scoop is the catch-all name for a series of policies enacted by provincial child welfare authorities starting from the mid-1950s, which saw thousands of Indigenous children taken from their homes and families, placed in foster homes, and often adopted out to non-indigenous families from across Canada, the US, Western Europe ...

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