Dear Nasima, I can add two of my own - not on parenting alone, but on
South Asian mothers in Canada:
Dyck, I. Travelling tales and migratory meanings: South Asian migrant
women talk of place, health and healing. Social & Cultural Geography,
7(1):1-18, 2006.
Dyck, I. & Dossa, P. Place, health and ?home?: Gender and migration in
the constitution of healthy space. Health and Place. 13:691-701, 2007.
Good luck with your research.
Best wishes, Isabel
Quoting Ruth DeSouza <[log in to unmask]>:
> Nasima
> Haven't tracked any down, but in terms of broader issues. Here's a few
> refs that might get you going. I've also recently come across one on
> second generation South Asian mothers. Sounds a fantastic topic.
> Ruth
>
> Abraham, M. (2000). Speaking the unspeakable : marital violence among
> South Asian immigrants in the United States. New Brunswick, N.J. ;
> London: Rutgers University Press.
> Ahmad, F., Riaz, S., Barata, P., & Stewart, D. E. (2004). Patriarchal
> beliefs and perceptions of abuse among South Asian immigrant women.
> Violence against Women, 10(3), 262-282.
> Ahmad, F., Shik, A., Vanza, R., Cheung, A., George, U., & Stewart, D.
> E. (2004). Popular health promotion strategies among Chinese and East
> Indian immigrant women. Women & Health, 40(1), 21-40.
> Ahmad, F., Shik, A., Vanza, R., Cheung, A. M., George, U., & Stewart,
> D. E. (2004). Voices of South Asian women: Immigration and mental
> health. Women & Health, 40(4), 113-130.
> Anand, A., & University of, L. (2003). Positioning shame in the
> relationship between acculturation/cultural identity and psychological
> distress, specifically depression, among British South Asian women.
> Leicester: University of Leicester.
> Atkinson, P., & Health Education, A. (1994). The advantages and
> disadvantages of qualitative methods for studying health beliefs and
> barriers in South Asian communities. Cardiff: Health and Personal
> Social Services Research Group University of Wales School of Social
> and Administrative Studies.
> Atkinson, P., University of Wales, H., & Personal Social Services
> Research, G. (1994). The advantages and disadvantages of qualitative
> methods for studying health beliefs and barriers in South Asian
> communities. Cardiff: University of Wales School of Social and
> Administrative Studies.
> Ayyub, R. (2000). Domestic violence in the South Asian muslim
> immigrant population in the United States. Journal of Social Distress
> and the Homeless, 9(3), 237-248.
> Bhopal, K. (1997). Gender, 'race' and patriarchy : a study of South
> Asian women. Aldershot: Ashgate.
> Bhopal, K. (2000). South Asian women in East London - The impact of
> education. European Journal of Womens Studies, 7(1), 35-52.
> Bottorff, J. L., Johnson, J. L., Bhagat, R., Grewal, S., Balneaves, L.
> G., Clarke, H., et al. (1998). Beliefs related to breast health
> practices: The perceptions of South Asian women living in Canada.
> Social Science & Medicine, 47(12), 2075-2085.
> Bowler, I. (1993). Midwives attitudes to clients of South Asian
> descent. Nursing Times, 89(23), 58.
> Bradby, H. (1996). Cultural strategies of young women of South Asian
> origin in Glasgow, with special reference to health : thesis submitted
> for Doctorate of Philosophy at Glasgow University.
> Brah, A., Shaw, S., & Great Britain Employment Department, G. (1993).
> Working choices : South Asian young women and the labor market.
> Sheffield: Employment Department.
> Bush, H., Williams, R., Bradby, H., Anderson, A., & Lean, M. (1998).
> Family hospitality and ethnic tradition among South Asian, Italian and
> general population women in the West of Scotland. Sociology of Health
> & Illness, 20(3), 351-380.
> Carroll, R., Ali, N., Azam, N., & National Co-ordinating Centre for,
> H. T. A. (2002). Promoting physical activity in South Asian Muslim
> women through exercise on prescription. Alton: Core Research on behalf
> of the NCCHTA.
> Chaudhry, S., Fink, A., Gelberg, L., & Brook, R. (2003). Utilization
> of Papanicolaou smears by South Asian women living in the United
> States. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 18(5), 377-384.
> Currie, P. (1999). A study of hospital and voluntary mental health
> service usage by the Asian and Chinese Communities in Edinburgh.
> Dasgupta, S. D. (1998). A patchwork shawl: chronicles of South Asian
> women in America. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
> Dasgupta Shamita, D. (1998). A patchwork shawl : chronicles of South
> Asian women in America. New Brunswick, N.J. ; London: Rutgers
> University Press.
> Donovan, J. (1986). We don't buy sickness, it just comes : health,
> illness and health care in the lives of black people in London.
> Epping: Gower.
> Gajjala, R. (2004). Cyber selves : feminist ethnographies of South
> Asian women. Walnut Creek, Calif.: AltaMira Press.
> Ghuman, P. A. S., National Foundation for Educational Research in, E.,
> & Wales. (1975). The cultural content of thinking : a comparative
> study of Punjabi and English boys. Windsor: Nfer.
> Henley, A., & King Edward's Hospital Fund for, L. (1979). Asian
> patients in hospital and at home. London: King Edward's Hospital Fund
> for London ; Tunbridge Wells : Distributed by Pitman Medical 1979.
> Howard, A. F., Bottorff, J. L., Balneaves, L. G., & Grewal, S. K.
> (2007). Punjabi immigrant women's breast cancer stories. Journal of
> Immigrant and Minority Health, 9(4), 269-279.
> Hussain, F., & Cochrane, R. (2004). Depression in South Asian Women
> Living in the UK: A Review of the Literature with Implications for
> Service Provision. Transcultural Psychiatry, 41(2), 253-270.
> Hyndman, S. J., & Queen Mary, C. (1990). Housing and health amongst
> British Bengalis in Tower Hamlets. London: Department of Geography
> Queen Mary and Westfield College.
> Islam, N. (1998). Naming desire, shaping identity; Tracing the
> experiences of Indian lesbians in the United States. In S. D. Dasgupta
> (Ed.), A patchwork shawl: chronicles of South Asian women in America
> (pp. 229). New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
> Johnson, J. L., Bottorff, J. L., Balneaves, L. G., Grewal, S., Bhagat,
> R., Hilton, B. A., et al. (1999). South Asian womens' views on the
> causes of breast cancer: images and explanations. Patient Education
> and Counseling, 37(3), 243-254.
> Judd, P., Kassam Khamis, T., Thomas, J. E., Aga Khan Health Board for
> the United, K., King's College, L. D. o. N., & Dietetics. (2000). The
> composition and nutrient content of foods commonly consumed by South
> Asians in the UK. [London]: Aga Khan Health Board for the United
> Kingdom.
> Judd, P. A., Kassam-Khamis, T., Thomas, J., & Aga Khan Health Board
> for the United, K. (2000). The composition and nutrient content of
> foods commonly consumed by South Asians in the UK. [London]: Aga Khan
> Health Board for the United Kingdom.
> Kalra, V. S. (2000). From textile mills to taxi ranks: Experiences of
> migration, labour and social change. Aldershot: Ashgate.
> Karasz, A., & McKinley, P. S. (2007). Cultural differences in
> conceptual models of everyday fatigue: A vignette study. Journal of
> Health Psychology, 12(4), 613-626.
> Katbamna, S. (2000). 'Race' and childbirth. Buckingham: Open
> University Press.
> Lawrence, J. M., Devlin, E., Macaskill, S., Kelly, M., Cninouya, M.,
> Raats, M. M., et al. (2007). Factors that affect the food choices made
> by girls and young women, from minority ethnic groups, living in the
> UK. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics, 20(4), 311-319.
> Leckie, J. (1995). South Asians: Old and new migrations. In S. W.
> Greif (Ed.), Immigration and national identity in New Zealand (pp.
> 133-160). Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.
> Leckie, J. (1995). Silent immigrants? Gender, immigration and
> ethnicity in New Zealand. In S. W. Greif (Ed.), Immigration and
> national identity in New Zealand (pp. 50-76). Palmerston North:
> Dunmore Press.
> Mamdani, M. (1973). From citizen to refugee: Uganda Asians come to
> Britain. London,: Frances Pinter (Publishers) Ltd.
> Martins, V., & Reid, D. (2007). New-immigrant women in urban Canada:
> Insights into occupation and sociocultural context. Occupational
> Therapy International, 14(4), 203-220.
> McLeod, W. H. (1986). Punjabis in New Zealand : a history of Punjabi
> migration 1890-1940. Amritsar: Guru Nanak Dev University.
> McLeod, W. H., & Central Indian Association Country, S. (1984). A list
> of Punjabi immigrants in New Zealand, 1890-1939. Hamilton [N.Z.]:
> Country Section of the Central Indian Association.
> Merchant, M. (2000). A comparative study of agencies assisting
> domestic violence victims: Does the South Asian community have special
> needs? Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless, 9(3), 249-259.
> Mohanty, S. A., Woolhandler, S., Himmelstein, D. U., & Bor, D. H.
> (2005). Diabetes and cardiovascular disease among Asian Indians in the
> United States. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 20(5), 474-478.
> Murphy, J. (1981). Health care provision for the Asian community.
> [Manchester]: Health Services Management Unit University of Manchester.
> Nari Kallyan, S. Newsletter. Edinburgh: Nari Kallyan Shangho.
> Nari Kallyan, S. Annual report. Edinburgh: Nari Kallyan Shangho.
> Nari Kallyan, S. (2001). Dealing with depression : a guide for South
> Asian women. Edinburgh: Nari Kallyan Shangho.
> Nawas, S. (2002). Preventing heart disease : a guide for South Asian
> families. Edinburgh: Nks.
> Patel, K. C. R., Bhopal, R. S., & South Asian Health, F. (2003). The
> epidemic of coronary heart disease in South Asian populations : causes
> and consequences. Birmingham: South Asian Health Foundation.
> Puwar, N. (2002). Multicultural fashion ... stirrings of another sense
> of aesthetics and memory. Feminist Review(71), 63-87.
> Puwar, N., & Raghuram, P. (2003). South Asian women in the diaspora, Oxford.
> Raj, D. S. (2003). Where are you from? : Middle-class migrants in the
> modern world. Berkeley: University of California Press.
> Ralston, H. (1996). The lived experience of South Asian immigrant
> women in Atlantic Canada. Lewiston, NY ; Lampeter: Edwin Mellen Press.
> Raza, H., Nari Kallyan, S., Nari Kallyan Shangho. Women's Welfare, G.,
> & National Lottery Charities Board, S. (1999). 'Oh, sugar!' : a
> seminar on diabetes and incontinence, 17th June 1999. Edinburgh: Nari
> Kallyan Shangho.
> Reed, K. (2003). Worlds of health : exploring the health choices of
> British Asian mothers. Westport, Conn. ; London: Praeger.
> Syal, M. (2000). Life isn't all ha ha hee hee. London: Anchor.
> Thomas, M., Avery, V., Great Britain. Office for National Statistics.
> Social Survey, D., & Great Britain. Dept. of, H. (1997). Infant
> feeding in Asian families : early feeding practices and growth ; a
> survey carried out in England by the Social Survey Division of the
> Office for National Statistics on behalf of the Department of Health.
> London: The Stationery Office.
> Twaddle, M. (1990). East African Asians through a hundred years. In C.
> G. Clarke, C. Peach & S. Vertovec (Eds.), South Asians overseas :
> migration and ethnicity (pp. 149-163). Cambridge ; New York: Cambridge
> University Press.
> Vydelingum, V. (2000). South Asian patients' lived experience of acute
> care in an English hospital: a phenomenological study. Journal of
> Advanced Nursing, 32(1), 100-107.
> Wandsworth Council for Community, R. (1978). Asians & the health
> service : a directory of measures implemented by area health
> authorities to meet the needs of the Asian community. London:
> Published by Commission for Racial Equality for Wandsworth Council for
> Community Relations.
> Williams, R., Bhopal, R., & Hunt, K. (1993). Health of a Punjabi
> Ethnic-Minority in Glasgow - a Comparison with the General-Population.
> Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 47(2), 96-102.
> Wilson, A. (2007). The forced marriage debate and the British state.
> Race and Class, 49(1), 25-38.
> Winters, L., & Liverpool Public Health, O. (1998). South Asian heart
> health project : a report for Liverpool Health Authority. Liverpool:
> Liverpool Public Health Observatory.
> Yasmin, H. (2005). Writing diaspora : South Asian women, culture, and
> ethnicity. Aldershot, Hants, England ; Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
>
>
>
> On 20/03/2009, at 5:54 AM, nasima khan wrote:
>
>>
>> Dear All,
>>
>> I'm researching on the experiences of mothering alone within the
>> South Asian communities in the U.K.
>>
>> I would be grateful for any information/research on this particular
>> group. I am also looking for participants to interview in London.
>>
>> Thanks.
>> Regards.
>> Nasima
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --- On Thu, 19/3/09, Lisa Fontes <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> From: Lisa Fontes <[log in to unmask]>
>> Subject: cultural competence & anti-racist work
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Date: Thursday, 19 March, 2009, 1:04 PM
>>
>> In response to Suman's statement, no, I do not believe that discussions of
>> cultural competence "have exacerbated the persistence of racism" for a
>> second. If cultural competence is discussed without a power
>> analysis or without
>> a discussion of racism, then it is inadequate. But cultural
>> competence includes
>> issues other than racism as well--such as language access. We can
>> blame many
>> factors for the persistence of racism but I do not think cultural
>> competence is
>> one of them.
>>
>> I don't see us as needing to choose between anti-racist work and cultural
>> competence. The two--necessarily--go hand in hand.
>>
>>
>> Lisa Fontes, Ph.D.
>> Union Institute & University, USA
>> author: Interviewing Clients across Cultures and
>> Child Abuse & Culture (both from Guilford Press).
>>
>>
>> ---- Original message ----
>>> Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2009 12:32:32 +0000
>>> From: SUMAN FERNANDO <[log in to unmask]>
>>> Subject: Re: Culturally Competent Services--Senior Coucil Managers will
>> need more Help in understanding this!
>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>>
>>> Dare I suggest that all this talk abut 'culture' and 'cultural
>> competence'
>>> -and that seems to be what DRE is all about - may have obscured and so
>>
>>> excacerbated the persistence of racism? The equalities agenda of course
>>
>>> makes things worse. Are we back in the 1970s again? At the launch of the
>>
>>> enquiry intoodeath of David Bennett (died ten years ago) when the people
>>
>>> giving speeches said hiw keen the Govt was to pursue cultural
>>> comptence (or
>>
>>> was it sensitiviry) someone in the audiance asked whether cultural
>>> training
>>
>>> would have prevented hsi death. There was no answer!
>>
>>>
>>
>>> Suman
>>
>>>
>>
>>> Suman Fernando
>>
>>> Hon. Senior Lecturer, European Centre for Study of Migration & Social
>> Care
>>> (MASC)
>>
>>> Visiting Professor, Department of Social Sciences, London Metropolitan
>>
>>> University
>>
>>>
>>
>>> --- On Wed, 18/3/09, Sanyal Neil <[log in to unmask]>
>> wrote:
>>>
>>
>>> From: Sanyal Neil <[log in to unmask]>
>>
>>> Subject: Re: Culturally Competent Services--Senior Coucil Managers will
>>
>>> need more Help in understanding this!
>>
>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>
>>> Date: Wednesday, 18 March, 2009, 5:52 PM
>>
>>>
>>
>>> I don't know where you work Kaltum but down here on the South Coast
>> many
>>> managers are not entirely sure what a culturally competent service is
>>
>>> either. In Dorset, where I live and used to work, it is like living in
>> the
>>> 1950s in relation to many (but not all) people's attitudes and
>> prejudices
>>> and awareness levels. Many of us working in race equality in Dorset use
>> the
>>> phrase - "The land time forgot". At the DRE National Conference
>> last
>>> Thursday a South Asian woman who has lived in the Isle of Wight for 10
>>
>>> years broke down in tears in front of 400 delegates (I was one of them)
>>
>>> when she described the island as being in the 1950s on equalities issues
>>
>>> and how she gets spat on in the street just for being South Asian.
>>
>>> The journey is a long one but here in Hampshire we feel we have moved a
>>
>>> long way over the last 5 years of hard-working activity. We benefit from
>>
>>> highly effective partnership working. I wish you well with your task to
>>
>>> help your senior manager in his understanding!!
>>
>>>
>>
>>>
>>
>>> Neil Sanyal MSc
>>
>>> Senior Social Work Practitioner
>>
>>> Romsey/TVS Community Mental Health Team (Hampshire Partnership Trust)
>>
>>> 5 Horsefair Mews
>>
>>> Romsey
>>
>>> Hampshire
>>
>>> SO51 8JG
>>
>>>
>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>
>>> From: Health of minority ethnic communities in the UK
>>
>>> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of kaltum
>> osman
>>> Sent: 17 March 2009 16:38
>>
>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>
>>> Subject: Re: Culturally Competent Services--Senior Coucil Managers will
>>
>>> need more Help in understanding this!
>>
>>>
>>
>>> Dear all,
>>
>>> Something to share with you:
>>
>>>
>>
>>> After all our hard work in making sure that culturally sensitive
>>
>>> services are put in place, I have recently attended a meeting ( my
>> work
>>> is now with BME Children and Young People), and at that meeting a
>>
>>> senior coucil manager asked what culturally competent service was!
>>
>>>
>>
>>> I am not sure if people are getting enough trainings or knowledge but
>>
>>> this certainly made me annoyed.
>>
>>>
>>
>>> Kaltum Osman Rivers
>>
>>>
>>
>>>
>> ***************************************************************************
>>>
>>
>>> CONFIDENTIALITY: The contents of, and any electronic files attached to
>> this
>>> e-mail may be confidential. If this correspondence has been incorrectly
>>
>>> addressed (whatever the reason), you are put on notice that you are not
>>
>>> authorized to copy or forward it in any form.
>>
>>>
>>
>>> If you receive this electronic message in error, you are politely
>> requested
>>> to inform the sender and to delete the original message.
>>
>>>
>>
>>>
>> ***************************************************************************
>>
>> Windows Live just got better. Find out more!
--
Isabel Dyck, PhD
Department of Geography
Queen Mary, University of London
Mile End Road
London E1 4NS
Tel: 020 7882 5416
Fax: 020 8981 6276
|