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  • 标题:Service Organisations’ Cultural Competency When Working with Ethnic Minority Victims/Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse: Results from a Program Evaluation Study in Australia
  • 本地全文:下载
  • 作者:Pooja Sawrikar
  • 期刊名称:Social Sciences
  • 印刷版ISSN:2076-0760
  • 出版年度:2020
  • 卷号:9
  • 期号:152
  • 页码:152
  • DOI:10.3390/socsci9090152
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:MDPI, Open Access Journal
  • 摘要:Founded in the results of a systematic literature review, a professional development program was developed about the needs of ethnic minority victims/survivors of child sexual abuse, with one component on the role of organisations. The objective was to address the misperception that frontline workers are more responsible for cultural competency. The program was delivered across Australia in 2019 (T1 n = 112, T2 n = 44). Data collection for the program evaluation was conducted over six months using a mixed-methods design. The results show that: (a) a sizeable portion of organisations (16%) do not have any iethnic minority staff/i, and very few are iin management positions/i (6–13%); (b) ethnic minority staff, and staff in organisations specialised for ethnic minority communities, ioffer choice to clients about ethnically-matched service providers/i more often; (c) there is evidence supporting the usefulness of iongoing training/i; (d) the use of a imulticultural framework/i was rated higher ‘in principle’ than ‘in practice’, and ratings increased after the program; (e) the proportion of organisations collecting iethnicity-related data/i did not increase over time; (f) all organisations specialised for ethnic minority communities had ivisually inclusive websites/i but was only 54% for mainstream organisations; and (g) organisations specialised for ethnic minority communities have er ilinks with other local ethnic minority community organisations/i. Overall, the program is seen as useful for promoting cultural competency at the organisational level; clearly identifying key mandatory and ideal elements, which support good practice with this highly vulnerable and marginalised client group.
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