Deck 27: Intergenerational Trauma and Indigenous People Hilary Weaver

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Question
When does intergenerational trauma occur?

A) Following elections
B) During selection of unprecedented persons for leadership
C) Following a recession
D) Following large-scale losses
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Question
What type of trauma typically occurs in populations that experience a power disadvantage and subsequent oppression?

A) Sequential trauma
B) Small-scale trauma
C) Large-scale trauma
D) Generational trauma
Question
What are two critical factors of recovery?

A) Remembering and mourning
B) Acknowledgment and acceptance
C) Recounting and re-living
D) Counseling and social support
Question
What type of trauma is best conceptualized in sequential stages?

A) Intergenerational trauma
B) Generational trauma
C) Large-scale trauma
D) Historical trauma
Question
What factors perpetuate trauma?

A) Retelling stories and reliving the past
B) Physical and psychological expressions of violence
C) Constant war and violence
D) Miniature-scale replication of large violence
Question
What factor contributed to the devastation experienced by Indigenous peoples in America for which there was no solution?

A) New diseases
B) Lack of resources
C) Natural disasters
D) Genocide
Question
What are the assimilationist social policies designed to eliminate Indigenous cultures, languages, and spirituality?

A) Dawes Act of 1887
B) Contemporary expressions of violence
C) Intergenerational trauma
D) Cultural genocide
Question
What Act created the federal trusteeship over Native people and resulted in the loss of Native land holdings?

A) Native American Land Holdings Act
B) Dawes Act
C) Cultural Genocide Act
D) Indigenous Relegation Act
Question
What event served as a capstone summarizing many losses experienced by the Lakota and other indigenous peoples?

A) Wounded Knee Massacre
B) Dawes Act
C) Cultural Genocide Act
D) Lakota Massacre
Question
Native American cultures emphasize a collective sense of identity prioritizing the group over the individual.
Question
Broken treaties and erosion of promises by the European settlers added to the traumatic experiences of Native Americans.
Question
Under the he Dawes Act of 1887, the U.S. conducted a policy of dividing Native lands and distributing them to individuals.
Question
Large-scale trauma includes traumatic events linked to social, biological, and spiritual indicators of well-being.
Question
Cumulative intergenerational stress may trigger a host of psychosocial and biological disorders.
Question
Assessment for historical trauma should include a family history to identify how current problems fit with intergenerational patterns.
Question
Empowerment practice can serve as a framework for interventions for intergenerational trauma.
Question
When working with Indigenous populations, any common life and background experiences between client and practitioner may be presumed as a basis for a connection and potential for transference and countertransference.
Question
Much of what Native Americans experienced was trauma, but the use of trauma-informed care with this population is unethical in social work practice because it will retraumatize this disenfranchised population.
Question
One role of social workers with this population is to interrupt the cycle of intergenerational trauma.
Question
What are two aspects of client narratives that, when told from an Indigenous perspective, promote healing?
Question
What are the five basic principles of trauma-informed services?
Question
Describe intergenerational and large-scale trauma, and explain the shift in the role of social workers in helping this population.
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Deck 27: Intergenerational Trauma and Indigenous People Hilary Weaver
1
When does intergenerational trauma occur?

A) Following elections
B) During selection of unprecedented persons for leadership
C) Following a recession
D) Following large-scale losses
Following large-scale losses
2
What type of trauma typically occurs in populations that experience a power disadvantage and subsequent oppression?

A) Sequential trauma
B) Small-scale trauma
C) Large-scale trauma
D) Generational trauma
Large-scale trauma
3
What are two critical factors of recovery?

A) Remembering and mourning
B) Acknowledgment and acceptance
C) Recounting and re-living
D) Counseling and social support
Remembering and mourning
4
What type of trauma is best conceptualized in sequential stages?

A) Intergenerational trauma
B) Generational trauma
C) Large-scale trauma
D) Historical trauma
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5
What factors perpetuate trauma?

A) Retelling stories and reliving the past
B) Physical and psychological expressions of violence
C) Constant war and violence
D) Miniature-scale replication of large violence
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6
What factor contributed to the devastation experienced by Indigenous peoples in America for which there was no solution?

A) New diseases
B) Lack of resources
C) Natural disasters
D) Genocide
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7
What are the assimilationist social policies designed to eliminate Indigenous cultures, languages, and spirituality?

A) Dawes Act of 1887
B) Contemporary expressions of violence
C) Intergenerational trauma
D) Cultural genocide
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Unlock for access to all 22 flashcards in this deck.
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8
What Act created the federal trusteeship over Native people and resulted in the loss of Native land holdings?

A) Native American Land Holdings Act
B) Dawes Act
C) Cultural Genocide Act
D) Indigenous Relegation Act
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Unlock for access to all 22 flashcards in this deck.
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9
What event served as a capstone summarizing many losses experienced by the Lakota and other indigenous peoples?

A) Wounded Knee Massacre
B) Dawes Act
C) Cultural Genocide Act
D) Lakota Massacre
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10
Native American cultures emphasize a collective sense of identity prioritizing the group over the individual.
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11
Broken treaties and erosion of promises by the European settlers added to the traumatic experiences of Native Americans.
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12
Under the he Dawes Act of 1887, the U.S. conducted a policy of dividing Native lands and distributing them to individuals.
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13
Large-scale trauma includes traumatic events linked to social, biological, and spiritual indicators of well-being.
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14
Cumulative intergenerational stress may trigger a host of psychosocial and biological disorders.
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15
Assessment for historical trauma should include a family history to identify how current problems fit with intergenerational patterns.
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16
Empowerment practice can serve as a framework for interventions for intergenerational trauma.
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17
When working with Indigenous populations, any common life and background experiences between client and practitioner may be presumed as a basis for a connection and potential for transference and countertransference.
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Unlock for access to all 22 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
18
Much of what Native Americans experienced was trauma, but the use of trauma-informed care with this population is unethical in social work practice because it will retraumatize this disenfranchised population.
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k this deck
19
One role of social workers with this population is to interrupt the cycle of intergenerational trauma.
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k this deck
20
What are two aspects of client narratives that, when told from an Indigenous perspective, promote healing?
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21
What are the five basic principles of trauma-informed services?
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22
Describe intergenerational and large-scale trauma, and explain the shift in the role of social workers in helping this population.
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