Here are the ramblings of Damian Abrahams. Most of what you read are from the inner realm of his mind, others may be an assignment given to him by a professor, and others still are just his simple opinion that he hopes will help bring understanding to a particular topic. Enjoy.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Dear Mr. Harper

Mr. Harper,
As a Canadian, one who you represent, I urge you to meet with Chief Theresa Spence and bring the Governor General with you.

You must go to her in person. When you arrive on Victoria Island, be sure to request permission to enter the tipi she is currently residing in. Once inside, allow her to eat the meal you've brought to her before you start your conversation.

Allow Mrs. Spence to talk first and until she is done, do not interrupt. When it is your turn to speak, give her another opportunity to speak by asking "Is there anything else you'd like to add?" and if she says no, reply to her. Don't make excuses, or bring up anything that might have been lingering the last two weeks, that is not what the meeting is about. Let her know that you are behind her, as the rest of Canada is, that you will try with every piece of power you have as the Prime Minister of Canada, to meet her requests.

When you are done, allow the Governor General to speak on behalf of Her Majesty, and if he still refuses to speak, remind him that our treaties were signed between the First Nations people of Canada and the one he is representing. Let me also point out, that by simply ignoring this matter, you are essentially saying no to millions upon millions of votes in the next federal election. Your time is limited.

This is how you must go about the meeting. Not because she is a better leader than you are, but because up to this point you have tarnished your name, Canada's name, and you've managed to do so to the rest of the world. Support for the Idle No More movement, in case you haven't noticed, is coming from Germany, the UK, Australia, New Zealand, the U.S, Columbia, Mexico, India, Palestine, Israel, basically people from all four directions of the planet are watching you and hoping that you meet with Chief Spence and the First Nations leaders. All of these people are from different countries that Canada has positive relations with via NAFTA and by not acting I predict that these countries will not be so cooperative.

In addition to this, the world is hoping you repeal Bill C-45. As am I. So please, do what is right.


Sincerely,


Damian Abrahams.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Dear Canada

The grassroots Idle No More movement is in opposition of Omnibus Bill C-45 and other Bills recently passed by the Conservative government. Bill C-45 delists MILLIONS of lakes and rivers from federal protection. Waters consumed by Canadians of all demographics. It also makes changes to the Indian Act, a piece of legislation that gives legal boundaries in which First Nations can operate. These changes threaten the treaties signed over the last 200 years between the Crown and First Nations leaders. These treaties gave authority to the Crown to make decisions regarding the land in exchange for: the reserves, access to medicines, education, tax exemption ON RESERVE, and $5/year for many band members.

It was agreed upon that these treaties are in effect "as long as the sun shines, the rivers flow, and the grass grows" and any changes to them must be approved by First Nations leaders and the Crown. Bill C-45 makes these changes WITHOUT CONSULTATION OF FIRST NATIONS LEADERS.

Though these changes are minor, releasing bands from needing a certain quota of band members to decide to surrender reserve lands, and making it easier for the Minister to call for such a meeting, that is not the point. Whether you steal a dollar or steal a million dollars, you're still stealing. Changes to the Indian Act are coming without consultation.

This is not the only issue. Reserves across Canada are suffering with substandard living conditions such as dishevelled housing, boil water alerts, poor education and learning conditions, and sedentary life styles. These factors make this battle multifaceted.

The government's response to the third world living conditions has been minimal. Their efforts play on our emotions by apologizing for past hurts. At the time of the apology survivors of Residential schools needed it.

Housing crises in many Aboriginal communities have led Chief of Attawapiskat First Nation Theresa Spence to take on a hunger strike on 11 December 2012 requesting a meeting with Harper and the representative of the Crown to discuss the conditions of her community and standards across Canada. Theresa Spence has stated that she is willing to die for her people. Harper and Johnston have remained silent over the matter. Aboriginal Affairs minister John Duncan has offered to meet with Spence but he is not included in the request.

Our stand has been in rallies that have numbered in the thousands in almost every major city in Canada (you may have read about them in the paper), and in many smaller towns and villages. We've also put up road blocks on highways and railroads to get our message out. We've also coordinated flash mob round dances in malls across Canada. All of these rallies, roadblocks, and round dances have been done peacefully and with the consent and support of the police and mall securities. In many cases, each event is preceded by ceremony to ensure they remain peaceful.

Idle No More's statement to the Harper government is "we will not allow these changes to be made" and many bands across Canada have issued statements saying they will not recognize the Bill. The movement has sparked worldwide support, people in the U.S, Mexico, New Zealand, Hawai'i, United Kingdom, Sweden, India, Australia and the United Nations of Aboriginal Australians, Palestine, Israel, Russia, Ukraine, and Egypt have joined us in support of our movement.

The Aboriginal people of Canada have supported the country many times in the past. During the War of 1812, First Nations warriors sided with either the French or the British and it was the valour, knowledge of the land, the sheer numbers of First Nations warriors, and the leadership of Tecumseh that helped the British win the war.

Large contingents of First Nations soldiers fought for Canada and British forces in the South African War.

Over 4000 First Nations soldiers, including one of my family members, fought in World War One, over 50 of them received medals for their valour. What's more, First Nations people were not included in the requirement of enlisting in war. They went willingly.

Again exempt from compulsory service in battle, First Nations soldiers numbered 3000+ including 72 female First Nations  soldiers and two of my family members, fought in World War Two in every major theatre with 17 medals awarded for their valour.

In both WWI and WWII First Nations bands donated monies to the Red Cross and the Canadian Military when they didn't have to.

An unknown number of voluntary soldiers enlisted to fight along side Canadian soldiers in Korea, but we have a good idea of how many enlisted by the 500+ First Nations soldiers who gave their life in battle.

Aboriginal soldiers have also fought in wars since: Persian Gulf, Desert Storm, Iraq, and Afghanistan. All voluntarily.

You see, up to now our people have stood side by side with the rest of Canada in almost every major theatre of war since Canada was established. Voluntarily. So please, join us in peace as we have joined you in war. Join us in solidarity against Bill C-45 as it impacts your health as it does ours.

Please see www.idlenomore.ca for more information on how you can join us in our stand against Harper.


Thursday, December 20, 2012

Letter to world leaders...

So far I've sent this letter to President Barack Obama, President Enrique Peña Nieto of Mexico, Prime Minister Julia Gillard of Australia, and Nelson Mandela...


Dear Prime Minister Gillard,

I am writing to you with utmost respect for you and your beautiful country.
Our political leader, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, is not doing my people very much good. Mr. Harper is not upholding the laws set down in working with us, and is undoing the treaties signed between my people and the crown.

As a result, the First Nations people of Canada have risen up against him on a grassroots level. The movement is called Idle No More, we have been rallying, putting up road blocks, and having peaceful demonstrations in opposition of his harmful legislations he is putting through our parliament.

One of our First Nations leaders is now on a hunger strike, going on day nine, demanding that she meet with him to discuss the state of her community and all her people across Canada.

I am writing you to request you kindly ask Prime Minister Harper to take our movement seriously, and to meet with Chief Theresa Spence (who is making her last stand mere steps from Parliament)

Thank you for your cooperation,
Sincerely,

Damian Abrahams.

Friday, December 14, 2012

Mi casa, su casa. Kind of.


Imagine if you will, you living in the home your great-grandparents built. One day your neighbor from across the street shows up at your door unannounced and hides in one of the corners of your home. They didn’t even knock. One day, you address the elephant in the room and you approach them, offering them food as they’ve been there for quite sometime and they haven’t eaten. They are grateful for the offering and tell you their story. As it turns out, their mom sent them out on a quest to find out what was actually across the street. “Mom is hard of seeing” they say. Things between you and your new housemate are going good until one day, while having some friends over, you discover they’ve started building an addition to your house. “We want to have our own space” they say.

That’s fine. But one day, you notice they have their family come stay with them too. You go investigate and you find they have friends and even strangers living in your house. You begin to wonder if they are planning to leave at all. They keep building and keep inviting friends and strangers to live in the areas they’ve built. But by this time your own children and families have grown old, some have died, other’s have moved away. On your death bed you tell your grandchildren to cooperate with your neighbors and guests. And they do, your grandchildren are now in charge of caring for your home and keeping your neighbor’s grandchildren from harm. For the most part everyone gets along.

 Generations go by and now your great-great-grandchildren are caretakers of your house. And your neighbor’s great-great-grandchildren have approached them, telling them they want to take over the whole house so they can build as they see fit. Seeing the value of the house that’s gone back 7 generations, they enter into negotiations with each other over who controls the house. They find they’ve entered into negotiations under the guidance of their mom across the street, so it’s really her they’re negotiating with. She wants full control of the house, but she is willing to compensate them fairly.

The mother proposes they give up the house and she will take care of them and all the generations that will come after them, for as long as the rivers flow. Your great-great-grandchildren are smart, they negotiate from the mom, medicine, a yearly allowance, they want their children to get an education. In exchange, they get their own room in the house while the mom across the street is free to build as many additions and invite as many people over as she wants. Your people find this to be fair compensation for conceding care over the house. To make things official, the mom across the street wants to make this a contract, and you all sign it.

By now, many more generations have passed, and the rooms your people were promised got smaller and smaller, and have never been repaired, some don’t even have running water, and those that do, the water is terrible. Your people can’t even drink it. But the house gets bigger and bigger. The mom across the street and all her people have now started posting rules around the house, and have even made it illegal for her people to enter your people’s rooms. The mom has even made it against the rules for you to watch TV, go shopping, to speak to one another in the language of your choosing, or to even build your own additions to the house.

The mom across the street figures it’s best if your people’s children go to school, a school she chooses. She hires the police to come take your children to bring them to a school several neighborhoods away. Some of the children will never come home. Then, when you thought the mom couldn’t do any worse, she tells the police that you are unfit and they come and take the children away and put them in other neighbor’s houses. Now all the children are gone.

But in addition to being smart, your people are strong. They find new ways to speak their language, they find new ways to bring their children home, and new ways to celebrate who they are. You see your people making a come back, they start making a stand against the mom across the street. She sees this and begins to rethink her strategy. She allows your people to start weighing in on the rule making, even lets them make their own rules, in their own rooms. She promises to never make changes to contract without your permission. But the mom across the street has given power to other people, people living within the house that once belonged to you.

Another couple generations go by, and your people find that the mom and her people haven’t been exactly been honoring their end of the bargain. Yet they continue to build additions, other houses even. They build walkways and whole new neighborhoods.

You begin to see that the rule makers absolutely want your people out of the house for good, but try to hide that fact by apologizing for taking your children away, making them selves look good, no one would suspect a thing. Then, behind closed doors, they decide they are going to make changes to the contract. All they’ve done was slide a little note under the doors of your people and go right ahead and make those changes. Those changes to the contract make it easier for your people to concede their rooms, and easy for their people to call a meeting to ask them to concede their rooms. And they’ve made those changes despite the disapproval of your people, other people in their part of the house, and other people from other neighborhoods, even people from across the street.

What would you do?

#idlenomore

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

To Your Majesty...


Below is a letter I am writing to the Queen:

Your Majesty,
I am writing you about my political leader, the Right Honorable Stephen Harper. As a First Nations man, I feel that Prime Minister Harper does not have my people’s best interests in mind. His actions of late indicate that he does not have the rest of Canadian’s best interests in mind either.
Having cleared foreign ownership of our natural resources, released his government from having to protect millions of lakes and rivers, and not attending to extreme housing crises in some of our reserves, my Prime Minister is not doing is job in representing all Canadians.
Our image to the rest of the world has been tarnished since Mr. Harper became Prime Minister, as indicated by the lack of applause in a United Nations meeting for our Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird. Not one representative afforded Mr. Baird applause.
Your Majesty, I fear Prime Minister Harper is set to dismantle the treaties that ancestors of both sides signed to ensure a thriving country and the Indigenous people were fairly compensated.
As your humble subject, and a citizen of Canada, I am requesting you relieve Mr. Harper of his position as Prime Minister of Canada and allow us to choose his replacement. I wish Your Majesty many years of health and happiness.

I have the honor to be your humble subject,
Sincerely,

Damian Abrahams.

You can also write a letter to her at: 

Her Majesty The Queen
Buckingham Palace

London SW1A 1AA

Thursday, December 6, 2012

My letter to Leona Aglukkaq

Dear Mrs. Aglukkaq,
My name is Damian Abrahams, I am from Haida Gwaii and am living in Edmonton. I am a First Nations father of a rambunctious three year old and am working on completing my Arts degree, convocation is next May. I will be the second member of my family to graduate with a university degree, the first being my naani (grandmother) who has her Master's in Education.

I am writing, pleading with, you to re-examine your role in the future of your people, and all your relations across Canada. First Nations, Metis, and Inuit people are in the cross hairs of Harper and his madness. He is aiming to take us out at the knees. He's already begun by chopping critical funding to grassroots organizations such as the National Aboriginal Health Organization, Stolen Sister's Awareness, the AFN, and many other that ensure that our people move forward, that we move away from mere survival and into living and even thriving.

I am afraid. I am afraid that Harper will break a promise made to our people many many years ago, long before you or I were even thought of. You see, Canada thrives because of that promise. Canada thrives at the expense of our suffering through, well, you know our history. I am afraid that through his actions, Harper will succeed where his predecessors have failed, to fully acculturate my people into the mainstream. In the words of the $10 man, John A. Macdonald, he will remove the indian problem. As much as I would like for my people to not rely on the Indian Act or the treaties, we are too far entrenched in them for us not to.

I feel betrayed. Betrayed that the Harper government would even consider cutting funding to grassroots organizations, let alone actually doing it. We are not weeds. Does he not know how far those organizations go to help our people? Or does he? I fear the latter the most. The National Aboriginal Health Organization for example housed the Lead Your Way! National Aboriginal Role Model Program. Every year NAHO sent out Aboriginal youth, the role models, to varying communities who needed a boost in confidence. I was one of those role models. Every community I visited, 16 in all, I saw children who wanted to be doctors, lawyers, professional athletes, computer software geniuses. They truly believed they could reach those heights. As the years went by those dreams were extinguished by, well, life. The Role Models came and rekindled those dreams. But Harper thought that was a bad idea I guess.

As I stated, I am writing to encourage you to re-evaluate your role in all of this. Please, for your people, for mine; for your children, and mine; for your grandchildren, and mine, make the right choice and choose not to take part in the Harper agenda.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Attachment theory and ethics related to violent offenders








Attachment Theory and Ethics related to Violent Offenders
Damian Abrahams
Concordia University College of Alberta












Abstract
Violence in society comes in many forms: domestic violence, sexual assault, homicide, suicide, child abuse, lateral violence, the list can go on. The perpetrators of violence impact the lives of many, and, when caught, immediately surrender their normal rights as human beings. This literature review will focus on two areas: 1. Attachment theory, as I theorize that the foundations of violent behavior are built during attachment development. 2. I will also focus on male, female, and Aboriginal offenders housed in minimum, medium, and maximum-security institutions, the rights they have or do not have, and the policies in place to interact with, evaluate, and ultimately release them into society. It was very difficult to find published, peer reviewed information on the ethics in dealing with violent offenders, so for the purpose of finding accurate, up-to-date information, psychologists working in the institutions were contacted and questioned.










Violent Offenders in Canada
Perpetrators and victims of violence represent a large cross section of people within society and manifests in a variety of ways. Violence, as defined by Serin and Preston (2001), is “the intentional and malevolent physical injuring of another without adequate social justification”. This definition accounts for overt violence. Psychological, emotional, lateral, sexual, and self-directed violence occurs covertly as well. In my experience working with victims and offenders I have been exposed to these covert forms of violence. Psychological violence occurs when perpetrators influence how their victims think or what they believe about themselves. Emotional violence occurs within families with children being the victims. Children are told not to feel a certain emotion or are ridiculed for expressing emotions. Lateral violence occurs largely in Aboriginal communities and consists of gossip, spreading of rumours, nepotism, and bullying. Lateral violence in Aboriginal communities typically occurs in the workplace. Sexual violence involves any unwanted physical contact, verbal remarks, and explicit preference for males or females. Self-directed violence includes self-injury, suicide, and, I believe, self-defeating thoughts and beliefs.
In dealing with the Aboriginal population, police officers, lawyers, and sheriffs often overlook the reason why Aboriginal offenders commit their acts of violence and attribute it to being morally impoverished. Though this is true, children’s morals are instilled in them by their parents, and when a child has a disorganized or avoidant attachment to the parent, the parent is often neglectful, inconsistent, or instills fear in the child. (Ainsworth, 1960) There is no transmission of morals taking place.
Attachment Theory
Mary Ainsworth (1989) is a pioneer in attachment theory, which she defines as a basic system of behavior that is biologically rooted and, therefore, is universal in nature. Attachment is a two-tiered behavior system that persists against genetics, culture, and individual experiences. The first system consists of reproductive behavior, parental behavior, feeding, and exploratory behaviors. The second system is an inner organization and is guided by genetics and influenced by the child’s environment. An example of environmental influence is object permanence where an infant fails to retain memory of an object (Shaffer, Kipp, Wood, and Willoughby, 2010). Only through games like peek-a-boo with a primary caregiver will the infant learn to build an expectation of presence. These types of environmental influences also build the infant’s inner expectations of his or her parents. For example, the infant learns a cry will beckon a parent. Ainsworth’s research suggests that young children are anchored in the motivations and plans of their caregiver and that this ability serves the child well. The child eventually learns he or she can ultimately influence those plans.
Components of attachment
John Bowlby first proposed the tenets of attachment theory in 1969. A child who is under threat or fear returns to his or her Safe haven to be soothed by his or her caregiver. The child feels safe enough to explore his or her surroundings from his or her Secure Base. When exploring the surroundings of the safe base, the child returns to caregiver after a period of time, this is called Proximity maintenance. Separation distress occurs when the child becomes distressed in the absence of a caregiver.
Ainsworth built on Bowlby’s work and introduced secure, ambivalent and avoidant attachment types. Securely attached children are distressed when separated from his or her primary caregiver but is confident of the caregiver’s return. When under threat or fear, the child will seek out the caregiver. Ambivalent attachment is defined by the extreme distress when the primary caregiver leaves due to the uncertainty of return. The child ultimately learns the caregiver cannot be depended on. Avoidant attachment style is exhibited by the avoidance of caregivers and no preference between the primary caregiver and a stranger. Main and Solomon (1986) added disorganized attachment style that is characterized by a lack of clear attachment and mixed responses to the caregiver (i.e. between avoidant and resistant). Children under this attachment style appear to be dazed, confused, and/or apprehensive.
Attachment failure
Registered psychologist Sonya Vellet works for the Calgary Urban Project Society in Calgary, Alberta and runs a vlog (Video Log) on Youtube called What Happens when Attachment Doesn’t Happen? Vellet says that children tend to have peer difficulties in school but are competent in dealing with adults. This is due perhaps to having to be vigilant in their interactions with adults who have predictable behavior. Children with failed attachment are also competent when away from their primary giver. I attribute this learned behavior to being necessary for survival. They also are unregulated emotionally and will withdraw when upset rather than seek comfort. Vellet describes them as having no strategy in place to deal with stress. I think is a grey area as teenagers typically are not fully equipped with planning, organization, or problem solving skills as they are still developing the areas of the brain responsible for these executive functions (Pinel, 2000).
Attachment of female violent offenders

According to Rossegger et. al. (2009), female offenders were found to have “absent and/or criminal parents” who were often neglectful. This parenting style leads to what Vellet (2010) refers to as an “irresolvable paradox”—the source of support becomes the source of fear. Compared to their male counterparts, female offenders reported higher levels of stressors such as sexual abuse, alcoholic parents, and family violence during childhood (Lewis, 2010). Absent or neglectful parenting styles prevents the child from forming loving and lasting relationships later in life (Lewis, 2010) and lays a strong foundation for violent behaviors later in life.
Women offenders, alcohol, and personality disorders
Alcohol has a stronger predictive factor for violence in females than in males, as high as three times as much (Weizmann-Henelius, Putkonen, Naukkarinen, & Eron, 2008). 60 women were included in Weizmann-Henelius’s study; all were convicted of murder or manslaughter. 81.7% were under the influence of alcohol at the time of their crime, and 89.6% were found to have a personality disorder (Antisocial Personality Disorder being the most prevalent) as determined by a Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders. Due to alcohol, female violent offenders were found to be characteristically closer to male offenders in that they were more violent, used more brutal methods of attack, and used more weapons as compared to non-intoxicated female offenders. An alarming fact is that women with substance abuse disorder are 55 times more likely to commit violent crimes, and are 49 times more likely to take another person’s life (Eronen, 1995 as cited in Weizmann et. al., 2009). Victims of female offenders were not as emotionally close to their attackers as I would have thought. Out of 83 victims, 58 were strangers, friends/acquaintances, and 17 were husbands or common-law. Ex-husbands and parents were safest with three victims, while children accounted for 5 of the total victims.
Aboriginal violent offenders
Aboriginal people in Canada are over represented in the jail system, some jails, like Stoney Mountain, report a 79% Aboriginal population. Prisons in Edmonton, Alberta report the same numbers. It is not just Aboriginal men who are over represented, women and youth also have higher numbers behind bars than other ethnicities in Canada. Is it that Aboriginal people are more likely to commit crimes? Or are there underlying factors that contribute to these higher numbers of incarceration?
Residential Schools
In 1857 the Government of Canada passed the Gradual Civilization Act that was meant to assimilate the First Nations people into European society (Brezeau, 2007). Under this act missionaries and government representatives, formally called “Indian agents”, asserted their power over the First Nations people who were seen as an inferior race. At the height of residential schools, there were 150 schools being operated by the various church entities with over 150,000 First Nations, Métis, and Inuit children attending the government-funded schools (Brezeau, 2007). The goal of residential schools was to abolish the Aboriginal (First Nations, Métis, and Inuit) way of life, and to assimilate the Aboriginal people into the dominant race.
Because of the sense of dominance, numerous accounts of multiple forms of abuse have come to light across the country in recent years. The main complaint of being in residential school is sexual abuse at the hands of the priests and nuns who were trusted to “take the Indian out of the child.” Students in the Residential Schools endured substandard conditions; they were forced to eat the minimal requirements for sustenance, while the school administrators dined on fine meals in a luxurious dining room (Brezeau, 2007). The students were not allowed to live their previous life. They were disconnected from their family, siblings who attended the same school were forbidden to communicate with each other, and their spiritual beliefs were met with punishment.
In the short term, the Residential School system succeeded in its intent: segregate the Aboriginal community, minimize Aboriginal culture, silence the fluent tongues, and remove the “Indian” from the children of the community. That success, however, left many generations crippled. The parents of the students no longer had purpose, they had no one to pass knowledge onto, the children faded into an existence where they were not accepted by their home community, nor were they sufficiently equipped to cope with the stresses of their new society. These children grew up without parenting skills, they grew up to disrespect authority because it was authority that came to apprehend them, and they grew up in an alien society not knowing how to function normally and effectively.
To give a clear idea of what occurred in residential schools, here is an account from one of the survivors courtesy of the research conducted by The Indian Residential School Survivors Society:
Psychological and emotional abuses were constant: shaming by public beatings of naked children, vilification of native culture, constant racism, public strip and genital searches, withholding presents and letters from family, locking children in closets and cages, segregation of sexes, separation of brothers and sisters, proscription of native languages and spirituality. In addition, the schools were places of profound physical and sexual violence: sexual assaults, forced abortions of staff-impregnated girls, needles inserted into tongues for speaking a native language, burning, scalding, beating until unconscious and/or inflicting permanent injury.
Intergeneration Trauma
The Residential School experience was the beginning of a major problem for Canada’s Aboriginal population. Effects of the above-mentioned trauma resonate in Aboriginal youth in spite of the many successes of recent years. Many young Aboriginals have those issues deeply engrained into who they have become. Problems with authority figures remain. Authority figures have been oversimplified and are not limited to police officers. Security guards, teachers, principles, school counselors, even parents and other members of the family are grouped in as an authority figure.
Many Aboriginal youth overlook the simplicity of sexuality. Sexuality is life—it ensures the communal family remains strong. Sexuality today has fallen under the influence of media, advertisements portraying women and men in their underwear; pornography is easily accessible on the Internet, and pressures from their peers to have sex all impinge on how an Aboriginal youth views his or her sexuality. Young woman believe they have to look like the woman in the advertisement, young men believe they have to perform like the men in the videos they find on the Internet and, in addition to that, they learn how to treat woman from those same videos. Everything has come to the point where communication about sex has been reversed: allowing a child to watch pornographic videos or images is easier than talking to them about sex and sexuality. In First Nations societies, it has always been the responsibility of the parents and even extended family members to teach their children about sexuality, the purpose of sex, and to even celebrate milestones in sexual maturity. The maladaptive ways of sexualizing Aboriginal youth that is occurring today stems from the shame of sexual abuse experienced in residential schools.
The children who suffered these abuses grew up to become violent offenders, drug and alcohol abusers, and sexual abusers. The biggest setback that young Aboriginals experience, however, is their lack of a healthy identity. Aboriginal people have long struggled with their legal identity. To be registered with the Canadian government as an “Indian”, which entitles the registrant to all the treaty rights their band falls under, one must be of First Nations descent (Brown, J., Higgit, N., Wingert, S., Miller, C., Morrissette, L, 2005). While Métis and Inuit people have been neglected the same rights. In the past, a First Nations person could lose their registration with the Government through marrying a non-Aboriginal person, but only a First Nations woman marrying a non-Aboriginal male would lose her status and all their children would not be entitled to treaty rights. When a First Nations male married a non-Aboriginal female, there were no consequences.
Aboriginal youth today face many factors that skew their identity further. Pressure to be accepted by their friends causes them to make changes to their identity, often for the worse, in order to be accepted. They end up behaving in ways they know is wrong, or joining gangs when they know it is not the right thing to do. This often comes from the lack of attention they receive from their family. The problem, then, is not a lack of identity; rather, they identify with the wrong aspects of the world around them. The shame their parents felt about being First Nations, Metis, or Inuit in residential schools can be felt, leading to a rejection of identifying as Aboriginal, claiming, instead, to be of Central American or Milado (Black and White) descent.
In the long term, however, the Residential School system failed. New generations of Aboriginal people understand that the way they were living was not how they were meant to live. They are discovering the culture they had lost, a culture that had come from the underground just as strong as it was when it was outlawed. The language was preserved and is again being transmitted to the younger generations, the children who suffered in residential school are overcoming their trauma and are even returning to academia to gather the skills needed to live in society rather than survive. These new skills are being passed onto their children. For the cultural elements that have been lost forever, new traditions and rituals are being created and are now stronger than ever. It turns out that the Indian in the child can never be removed.
Fire water
Alcohol is a factor that is a sensitive issue among Aboriginal people. We must be careful to not oversimplify alcoholism and Aboriginal people. In fact, the writer, who is First Nations, has a large circle of Aboriginal friends where only a small percentage consume alcohol, and an even smaller percentage who are problem drinkers. In the writer’s work with Aboriginal violent offenders 100% of them were under the influence of alcohol during their violent episode, that is not to say, though, that only Aboriginal people get violent when they drink, nor is it safe to say that only Aboriginal people are alcoholic, especially among those who are active in Aboriginal culture (Currie, et. al., 2011).
Joseph Johnston did extensive research on Aboriginal offenders in Canada in 1997, he reached approximately 50% of the federally incarcerated Aboriginal offenders in all levels of security. Johnston found 57.1% reported alcohol problems. 68% of those were violent offenders while 14.7% reported being forced to attend residential school.
In terms of needs, Johnston (1997) noted that, as determined by Case Management Officers, 88.2% of the offenders needed help addressing substance abuse problems but only 5.7% thought they needed help with addictions issues while 30% of them actually made the effort to address these issues.
Case Study-Gary Mattson
On the morning of 3 December 2009, Gary Mattson, who had no change to pay the fare, boarded a bus in Northeast Edmonton and requested to get on for free. Video footage, courtesy of the Edmonton Journal, of the dialogue shows Mr. Mattson speaking with the driver, Tom Bregg, in an appropriate manner. In what seemed like an unprovoked attack, Mr. Mattson punched Mr. Bregg two times before pulling him out of his seat and into the street. Mr. Mattson then stomped on Mr. Bregg’s head 15 times before leaving the scene. The media covered the incident extensively and painted Mr. Mattson as a mentally unstable, vicious, and remorseless maniac. One report by CBC News Edmonton (2010) stated: “After refusing to pay his fare, Mattson punched Bregg and pulled him out of his seat…then dragged Bregg on to the sidewalk and stomped on his head 15 times”. The language in the article makes it seem like Gary refused to pay his fare then attacked Bregg, but in reality some time elapsed and there was an interaction between the two. Because of this assault, Gary Mattson received the label of dangerous offender, ensuring that he will be incarcerated indefinitely.
I have helped Mattson with his addiction issues in 2009, and from what I know of Mr. Mattson he is not the mentally unstable, vicious, remorseless maniac he is made out to be. His background does include trouble with alcohol, but having watched the video I do not believe he was intoxicated at the time of the assault. His past also includes assaults, but each of them were not to the degree of the Bregg assault, nor were they ever unprovoked. Mr. Mattson does not go around looking for a fight. Mattson has a strong sense of protection when it comes to his family and being a First Nations man. These are his two triggers for violence. I feel that Bregg mentioned one of these two to Gary which set him off. This is not to justify his actions, I believe that Bregg has a part in the story and is not the innocent victim he is made out to be.
Aboriginal offenders and attachment
In terms of attachment theory, Johnston (1997) also found that 41.1% of the prisoners reported having absent or neglectful parents, 32.2% reported growing up in a single parent family, and 28.6% grew up in the foster care system. Other abuses such as physical (45.2%), sexual (21.2%) and severe poverty (35.3%) were also reported which I feel are important to note but are not within the scope of this paper.


Personality Disorders
Personality disorders have been found to be more associated with violent offenders than with non-violent offenders. Symptoms of personality disorders, such as compulsiveness, high emotional outbreaks, paranoia, and unstable relationships contribute highly to violent episodes.
Personality disorders correlated with violence
Tikkanen, Holi, Lindberg, and Virkkunen (2007) found that 39% of the 114 violent offenders they interviewed had Borderline Personality Disorder, 5% were diagnosed with Narcissistic Personality Disorder, 14% had Paranoid Personality Disorder, and 44% had two or more personality disorders. Ross and Fontao (2007) found that among the violent offenders they included in their research, Antisocial Personality Disorder, Borderline Personality Disorder, Narcissistic Personality Disorder, Histrionic Personality Disorder, and Schizotypal Personality Disorders were predominant. Both studies employed the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders to gather their information.
Ethics in working with violent offenders
Dealing with violent offenders is not typically something that psychologists do in a private practice setting. As such, the College for Alberta Psychologists does not have guidelines for interacting with them posted on their website. I theorized that the guidelines psychologists followed were set by the institutions in which the convicted violent offenders were housed. I spoke with two registered psychologists, one in a medium security jail and the other in a minimum security jail, and a psychological testing assistant who works in a maximum security jail.
Minimum security
Gregor Cotfas is a registered psychologist at Grierson Institution, a minimum security jail in Edmonton, Alberta. As well, Mr. Cotfas works at Edmonton Area Parole. Mr. Cotfas confirmed my theory: “ethical codes and guidelines within the institution must be followed. Inmates must be behind glass or shackled. Because psychologists are hands-off for those inmates who aren’t as violent, guards are often in the room when I’m interviewing them”.
When an inmate is up for release psychologists are included in the determination of level of risk. Mr. Cotfas says that there are several methods in doing so: the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised, a Balanced Risk Assessment, the HCL-20 and more. Three of these evaluation instruments must be used but Mr. Cotfas says that most psychologists use more.
The Parole Board of Canada, Mr. Cotfas says, requires a mental health assessment to be completed before any prisoner is released. If they are found to be of significant risk recommendations are provided by the mental health team to bring their risk level down and the inmate will not be released until the inmates are found to be of no risk to the safety of society.
Mr. Cotfas validates, to an extent, my theory that poor attachment is a forecast for later violent behavior: “It’s a rule [they] have little or no attachment. As kids the inmates are often abused, neglected, or jump from foster home to foster home”. I think that with little to no primary caregiver present to attach to, many children, such as the ones Mr. Cotfas is referring to growing up in the foster care system, are nourished by disorganized/disoriented attachment, they never are given the chance to attach in the first place.
Medium security
Dr. Richard Howes works at Stoney Mountain Institution, a medium security jail in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Dr. Howes states that in a medium security jail the institution regulates all interactions with the inmates. The institution dictates his interactions; contact with inmates depends on their level of offence. If an inmate is an extreme offender the inmate is shackled and in their cell. Even for those inmates who are not extreme offenders there must be guard present.
In regards to release into society, Dr. Howes says there are a variety of criteria considered in his evaluation. In assessing their risk the main test they use is the HCR-20 where higher scores reflect higher risk. The criteria on the HCR-20 are found in Appendix 1 and are courtesy of Dr. Howes.
Inmates who are deemed to be of low risk to society are recommended to outside sessions and Corrections is obliged to abide at no cost “to the person”. What is interesting is Dr. Howes’s use of words. Only now, when referring to the inmates leaving jail, are they referred to as a person. Their rights as people are not considered when decisions are being made about their life while they are incarcerated. Only after they are released do they become people again, but even then their rights are restricted. I do not believe their full rights as people are ever restored. Dr. Howes says, in regards to error in calculating risk, his team would rather make a type one error, predicting risk when there is none, than a type two error, detecting no risk when actually there is risk: “We would rather lock up someone innocent than release a prisoner who will reoffend”.

Maximum security
Shawn works at Edmonton Institution, colloquially known as The Max, the maximum-security prison in Edmonton, Alberta. Shawn is a psychological testing assistant. I was unable to speak with a registered psychologist, as they were all busy. Shawn works directly with both inmates and the registered psychologists and felt he was best able to answer my questions. When the psychologist works with inmates at Edmonton Institution their standards of best practice are set out by the institution while the ethics in dealing with them from a psychological aspect are guided by psychology. When an inmate is in a psychologist’s office, it is a clinical setting.
When considering release, protection of society and public safety are considered first and foremost. A balanced risk assessment is primarily used in the maximum security setting, a balanced risk assessment consists of a panel of experts, usually a forensic psychologist, a social worker, members from the parole board, and anyone else the Parole Board of Canada deems necessary. The goal of the assessment is always to get the inmates down to a medium security level before release into the community is considered.
Outside referrals are started one year in advance of their release, mental health assessments are completed in that same time period and are required as part of their parole. Paperwork to get identification is put into place, relocation planning is put into practice if the inmate does not want to stay in the city they were arrested, and vocational training is provided to get them ready for employment.
Conclusion
The two components covered of this paper, attachment theory applied to violent offenders, and ethics in working with violent offenders, has laid down strong groundwork for additional research in both areas. I did find indirect evidence that violent offenders have poor attachment styles. This conclusion, however, is deduced from the interview responses of having absent or criminal parents, being in an array of foster homes, and having a stress-filled childhood. These reports coupled with the description and implications of attachment lead me to believe that poor attachment does lead to violent behavior. None of the sources reviewed actually set out to associate attachment with violent offenses. This weakness implies that further research is needed to better understand and more effectively treat violent offenders.
Through my interviews with psychologists who work directly with violent offenders, my suspicions of institutional guidelines being imposed on psychologists, and that violent offenders have little to no rights were confirmed. Because of the history and nature of their “clients”, psychologist’s who work with violent offenders must closely follow protocol set out by the institution in which they work. Given that prisoners have very little rights, it would be interesting to find out what the consequence for not following protocol would be.
Prisoners do have rights, but those rights are need based; as in they need to eat, they need to have a place to sleep, and they need exercise. Releasing a violent offender, however, the rights and protection of society is considered ahead of the inmate’s. I hypothesize that inmates never regain their full rights even when released back into society. Why there is little documentation on the ethics in dealing with violent offenders remains to be seen. Even if the guidelines are set out by non-psychological entities, this knowledge would be valuable to all who hope to work with this population.

References
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Appendix
 HCR-20 variables
Historical variables
Previous violence (and offending), young age at first violent incident, relationship instability, employment problems, substance use problems, major mental illness, psychopathy, early maladjustment, personality disorder, and prior supervision failure.
Clinical variables:
Lack of insight, negative attitudes, active symptoms of major mental illness, impulsivity, and unresponsiveness to treatment.

Risk variables
Plans lack feasibility, exposure to destabilizers (i.e. conditions/factors which may trigger violent episodes including lack of professional support, difficulty in handling basic social and life skills, alcohol), lack of personal support, non-compliance with remediation attempts (i.e. rules, medication regime), and stress.