Monday, 19 September 2016
Australian Psychological Society apologizes to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People
Australian Psychological Society, Media
Statement, Thursday 15th
September 2016:
Today, the Australian
Psychological Society will issue a formal apology to Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander People, acknowledging psychology’s role in contributing to the
erosion of culture and to their mistreatment.
APS President Professor Michael
Kyrios said the apology was an important move in redressing past wrongs and
ensuring the psychology profession collaborates and appropriately serves
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
“The apology is only one of many
initiatives by the Australian Psychological Society to work together with
Indigenous psychologists and communities to meet the social and emotional
wellbeing and mental health needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people.”
Professor Pat Dudgeon - a Fellow
of the Society and Australia’s first Aboriginal psychologist - said, "This
is a tremendous moment for Australian psychology. The Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people and psychologists are delighted that the APS has taken
this important step."
The apology will be made at the
Australian Psychological Society Congress 2016 in Melbourne at 1.00pm,
following a keynote by Professor Pat Dudgeon on an emerging Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander psychology.
Full apology:
Apology to Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander People from the Australian Psychological Society. Disparities
between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians and other Australians
on a range of different factors are well documented. Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people experience much higher rates of psychological distress,
chronic disease, and incarceration than other Australians. They manage many
more stressors on a daily basis and, although suicide did not exist in their
cultures prior to colonisation it is now a tragically inflated statistic. The
fact that these disparities exist and are long standing in a first world nation
is deplorable and unacceptable.
As we understand these
challenging issues in relation to wellbeing and health, it is very important
that we tell the stories of the strengths and resilience of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander peoples and communities.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander people are the proud custodians of the longest surviving cultures on
our planet. With this in mind, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’
resilience and resourcefulness could make a significant and positive impact on
Australian society should they have the opportunity to contribute routinely in
their areas of expertise.
We, as psychologists, have not
always listened carefully enough to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people. We have not always respected their skills, expertise, world views, and
unique wisdom developed over thousands of years. Building on a concept
initiated by Professor Alan Rosen, we sincerely and formally apologise to
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians for:
·
Our use
of diagnostic systems that do not honour cultural belief systems and world
views;
·
The
inappropriate use of assessment techniques and procedures that have conveyed
misleading and inaccurate messages about the abilities and capacities of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people;
·
Conducting
research that has benefitted the careers of researchers rather than improved
the lives of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander participants;
·
Developing
and applying treatments that have ignored Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
approaches to healing and that have, both implicitly and explicitly, dismissed
the importance of culture in understanding and promoting social and emotional
wellbeing; and,
·
Our
silence and lack of advocacy on important policy matters such as the policy of
forced removal which resulted in the Stolen Generations.
To demonstrate our genuine
commitment to this apology, we intend to pursue a different way of working with
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people that will be characterised by
diligently:
·
Listening
more and talking less;
·
Following
more and steering less;
·
Advocating
more and complying less;
·
Including
more and ignoring less; and,
·
Collaborating
more and commanding less.
Through our efforts, in concert
and consultation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, we envisage
a different future.
This will be a future where
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people control what is important to them
rather than having this controlled by others.
It will be a future in which
there are greater numbers of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
psychologists and more positions of decision making and responsibility held by
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. Ultimately, through our combined
efforts, this will be a future where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people enjoy the same social and emotional wellbeing as other Australians.
-Ends-
Labels:
Australian society,
health,
human rights,
indigenous culture
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