BabaL. (2013). Cultural safety in first nations, inuit and metis public health: An environmental scan of cultural competency and safety in education, training and health services. Prince George, British Columbia, Canada: National Collaborating Centre for Aboriginal Health.
2.
BrascoupéS.WatersC. (2009). Cultural safety. Exploring the applicability of the concept of cultural safety to Aboriginal health and community wellness. Journal of Aboriginal Health, 5, 1–18.
3.
Conseil canadien de la santé. (2012). Empathie, dignité et respect: Créer la sécurisation culturelle pour les Autochtones dans les systèmes de santé en milieu urbain. Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Health council of Canada.
4.
CooneyC. (1994). A comparative analysis of transcultural nursing and cultural safety. Nursing Praxis in New Zealand, 9(1), 6–11.
5.
KoptieS. (2009). Irihapeti Ramsden: The public narrative on cultural safety. First Peoples Child & Family Review, 4, 30–43.
6.
Nursing Council of New Zealand. (2011). Guidelines for cultural safety, the treaty of Waitangi and Māori Health in nursing education and practice. Wellington: Nursing Council of New Zealand.
7.
RamsdenI. (2002). Cultural safety and nursing education in Aotearoa and Te Waipounamu. Wellington, New Zealand: Victoria University of Wellington.
8.
RichardsonC.Blanchet-CohenN. (2017). Cultural safety: Applications and implications for Indigenous children, families and communities. In HeleK. S. (Ed.), Survivance and reconciliation: 7 forward 7 back (pp. 88–102). 2015Winnipeg, Canada: CINSA.
9.
ToddN.WadeA. (1994, Fall). Deficiency, domination and psychotherapy. The Psychotherapy Networker, pp. 37–46.
10.
TuckE.YangW. (2012). Decolonization is not a metaphor. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 1, 1–40.
11.
VizenorG. (1999). Manifest manners: Narratives on postindian survivance. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press.
12.
WilliamsR. (1999). Cultural safety—What does it mean for our work practice?Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 23, 213–214.