ONE SIZE FITS FEW - From Cultural Incompetence to Contextual Sensitivity in Health Policy Development in Australia and Canada
Abstract
Australia and Canada have long and similar histories of accepting
immigrants from an increasingly diverse range of countries,
leading to the multicultural societies we see today. Both
countries also share a commitment to citizen engagement in
government business which, when combined with policies of
multiculturalism, seek to enrich government policy by the input
of the many and varied experiences and voices. However, despite
these best intentions, the engagement of citizens of culturally
and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds in government
business remains a challenge, particularly because of a lack of
attention to ‘culture’ in policy making processes.
The concept of cultural competence is well known in the public
sector. However, although mandatory Indigenous cultural
competence training exists to varying degrees in both countries,
there is no training for cultural competence relevant to other
CALD citizens specifically. Similarly, although some
jurisdictions offer support and guidance for citizen engagement,
there is very little explicit guidance in either country when it
comes to engaging with CALD background citizens.
This research is a comparative, cross country, case study which
focusses on the health-related public sector in Australia and
Canada. Drawing on analysis of government policy and interviews
with health policy officers, this thesis examines understandings
and applications of cultural competence, multiculturalism and
citizen engagement at the Federal and State or Territory and
Provincial government levels. Using a critical multicultural
perspective, I examine whether paying greater attention to
cultural competence could lead to better deliberative health
policy development in multicultural societies.
A number of key findings arise from this research:
1. A critical multicultural perspective draws attention to
systemic and individual assumptions which serve to stereotype
CALD citizens and entrench exclusion and disadvantage.
Application of a critical multicultural approach to health policy
development supports questioning of institutional processes and
procedures, as well as health policy officer assumptions and
biases, for equitable health policy development.
2. Everyday understandings of culture as an unchanging catalogue
of attributes which is somehow knowable are out of step with
current anthropological thinking of culture as relational and
meaning-centred and thus constantly changing. To suggest that a
health policy maker could become competent in culture is
therefore misleading.
3. The language of ‘cultural competence’ is unhelpful because
it focusses on culture as ethnicity. It is timely to shift
language to ‘contextual sensitivity’ for heightened awareness
of citizens as individuals shaped by their histories, life
experiences and current institutional structures. Awareness of
the context surrounding CALD citizens removes the need to
consider an individual as an ethnicity.
4. Resource constraints, multiple interests and competing
priorities influence citizen engagement practices. Despite the
presence of guidance and support in some jurisdictions, the
current one-size-fits-all processes exclude CALD background
citizens. A critical multicultural perspective applied to
citizen engagement supports questioning of processes and
procedures with a view to adoption of inclusive practices.
Whilst health policy is the focus of this thesis, ultimately
these findings are applicable to all levels of government from
Federal to local, and to all public policy domains.
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