Parenting in Greenland
Inunnguiniq and Resilience: A Scientific and Socio-Cultural Analysis of Infant Rearing Among the Greenlandic Inuit (Kalaallit)

Huu Ho
I. The Cultural Foundations of Kalaallit Child Development
The methods utilized by the Greenlandic Inuit, or Kalaallit, to raise their infants and young children are deeply embedded within a unique philosophical framework known as Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit (IQ). This complex system of traditional knowledge and cultural governance provides the essential foundation for child-rearing practices, prioritizing collective survival, autonomy, and profound respect for the individual. Understanding these foundational principles is essential for interpreting the efficacy and structure of Inuit infant care.
A. Defining Inunnguiniq: The Mandate for Human Formation
At the core of Inuit child development lies the concept of Inunnguiniq, which literally translates to "the making of a human being".1 This is not merely a description of parenting but a critical process of holistic socialization and education that occurs entirely within the context of the Inuit cultural worldview.1 The cultural expectation dictates that every child must mature into a capable, enabled individual possessing the proper attitude and ability to contribute positively to the common good, thereby securing a good life.1
The overarching philosophy, Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, is based on four fundamental laws (maligait), including maintaining balance and harmony, respecting all living things, working for the common good, and continually planning and preparing for the future.1 This interconnected worldview is fundamentally an adaptive mechanism honed over millennia in the Arctic environment.2 The physical reality of surviving freezing temperatures, scarce resources, and environmental hazards necessitates that individual survival relies completely on collective cohesion and preparedness. Therefore, the goal of Inunnguiniq—producing an ethically grounded, capable contributor—is directly coupled to ensuring cultural and physical continuation across generations.1 The process is characterized by shared responsibility within the group, serving as the Inuit equivalent of the philosophy that it requires a village to raise a child.1
B. The Centrality of the Name-Soul (Tuq&urausiq) and Respect
A distinguishing feature of Kalaallit child-rearing is the spiritual mechanism known as Tuq&urausiq, or traditional naming practices.1 Inuit hold the profound belief that when a child is born, they take on the "soul" or spirit of a recently deceased relative or community member.4 Through this practice, the child is spiritually and socially linked to the deceased individual, inheriting that person's entire network of familial relationships.1
This naming convention carries deep relational significance. For example, a child named after someone’s mother would henceforth be addressed as "mother" by the namesake's family members, and the child receives the same measure of respect and deference that was accorded to the elder while alive.1 Certain physical characteristics, skills, or personality traits exhibited by the infant are often attributed to the presence of the namesake’s soul.4 This elevates the status of the child within the community structure, fostering support through the broadest possible network of relationships.1
C. Non-Interference, Autonomy, and Observation-Based Learning
The concept of Tuq&urausiq serves as the direct spiritual and social justification for the dominant pedagogical approach: non-interference.1 Since the child is, in a profound sense, the living embodiment of an adult or elder, it is considered highly inappropriate and a violation of important social values to command or intrude upon the child.4 The child is thus given a substantial degree of indulgence and independence.4 This high level of freedom is practiced "so as not to affront the deceased person for whom the child is named".1
This policy of non-interference results in parenting methods that contrast significantly with many Euro-Western models.4 Parents typically allow children vast freedom, as long as they do not risk harm to themselves, others, or vital equipment like hunting gear or food stores.4 Rather than direct instruction, learning is promoted through observation, modeling, and interpersonal games.6 When behavioral issues arise, such as pouting or tantrums, parents employ passive discipline by ignoring the behavior, perceiving intrusive intervention as counterproductive.4
This educational model is a sophisticated mechanism for achieving environmental and social competence. The high physical demands of the Arctic require individuals capable of rapid, autonomous decision-making.5 By encouraging independence and observational learning from infancy, this approach cultivates self-reliance, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills—traits critical for survival.5 The cultural admiration for individuals who encounter and resolve problems independently is a direct reflection of this pedagogical goal.5
Table 1: Core Principles of Inunnguiniq and Their Manifestation
Principle | Literal Translation | Application in Infant Care | Developmental Outcome | Source |
Inunnguiniq | The making of a human being | Holistic socialization; shared community responsibility for raising the child 3 | Capable, ethical individual contributing to the common good 1 | 1 |
Tuq&urausiq | Name-soul / Naming practice | Child inherits relationships of the deceased namesake; accorded high respect (like an Elder) 4 | Foundation of individual respect and broad kinship network 1 | 1 |
Non-Interference | Respect for the individual's autonomy | Avoiding direct commands; indulgence and independence allowed; ignoring tantrums/pouting 4 | Fosters critical thinking, observation-based learning, and self-reliance 5 | 1 |
II. Traditional Infant Care and Arctic Biocultural Adaptations
The physical practices surrounding Inuit infant care are optimized for survival in one of the most hostile climates on Earth. These methods are not arbitrary cultural customs but intricate biocultural systems ensuring thermal regulation, safety, and nutritional sufficiency, often co-evolving with genetic adaptations.
A. The Amauti: An Integrated System for Survival and Bonding
The Amauti is the iconic traditional Inuit parka, worn by women in the Eastern Arctic, designed specifically to carry and protect an infant or young child.7 This garment is far more than simple clothing; it functions as an integrated, multi-purpose survival and developmental device. The child, typically carried until approximately two years of age, nestles in the built-in baby pouch, known as the amaut, located just below the hood on the mother's back.7
The design ensures maximum thermal regulation. The baby is traditionally carried naked, snuggled against the mother’s bare back.8 In this configuration, the mother's body acts as a constant, responsive thermal regulator, transferring necessary heat and preventing hypothermia, which poses a critical risk to infants in extreme cold.7 Furthermore, carrying the child in the amaut leaves the woman's hands entirely free for essential tasks, conserving maternal energy and maximizing efficiency.8 The garment is carefully secured with ties at the waist and shoulders to safely distribute the child's weight and prevent slipping.7
A key functional element is the ability of the mother to bring the child from her back to the front position. This movement facilitates immediate and discrete breastfeeding or helps manage eliminatory functions without exposing the infant to the punishing frostbite, wind, and cold.7 Beyond physical survival, the constant physical contact provided by the Amauti promotes secure attachment and deep bonding between mother and child, which is foundational to the socialization process of Inunnguiniq.7 Traditional Amautiit were made of highly insulating materials like sealskin or caribou skin, though modern versions may incorporate duffle cloth and windproof synthetic shells.7
Table 2: Features and Functions of the Traditional Amauti Parka
Feature | Description and Function | Developmental Impact | Arctic Survival Benefit | Source |
Amaut (Pouch) | Built-in pouch below the hood, carrying the child (up to age two) against the mother's back | Promotes constant mother-child physical contact and secure attachment/bonding 7 | Maximum insulation; mother’s body acts as thermal regulator 7 | 7 |
Front/Back Mobility | Mother moves child to front without exposure to the elements 7 | Facilitates immediate and discrete breastfeeding 7 | Prevents rapid heat loss during feeding or eliminatory functions 7 | 7 |
Materials | Traditionally sealskin or caribou skin; modern materials include duffle cloth | Ensures durability and flexibility in movement 7 | Superior windproofing and insulation capacity against extreme cold 2 | 7 |
B. Co-Sleeping, Breastfeeding, and Thermal Practices
In traditional Kalaallit society, the infant maintained nearly constant physical contact with the mother from the day of birth.9 This contact extended through the night, with the infant sleeping on the family platform or nestled in the mother’s parka.9 This constant proximity ensured rapid initiation of breastfeeding upon assessment by a midwife or sanaji.9 This continuous physical and nutritional presence is intertwined with the collective survival strategies, which rely on trapping heat efficiently within traditional homes (igloos or sod houses) and utilizing warm, layered clothing made from animal skins.2
A conflict arises between these traditional practices and contemporary Western public health guidelines, particularly regarding Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). While traditional practice mandates constant contact (often co-sleeping), modern health advice generally promotes supine (back) sleeping in a separate area. Survey data indicates a complex pattern: 52% of all Inuit infants surveyed were reported to be placed in the back position for sleep.10 However, when data is segregated geographically, only 37% of infants residing in Inuit Nunangat (traditional areas) were placed on their back, compared to 86% of respondents living outside this area.10 This lower adherence in traditional areas suggests a continued preference for, or reliance upon, the traditional contact model.9 It also highlights a critical structural vulnerability: housing overcrowding is rampant in many Indigenous communities and increases the transmission risk of illness.11 Where multi-generational homes and overcrowding are common, co-sleeping may be a practical necessity rather than an optional cultural preference, demanding culturally sensitive public health strategies for SIDS prevention that account for the reality of overcrowded housing.11
C. Genetic Basis for Arctic Resilience and Diet Adaptation
The physical survival and successful rearing of infants in the Arctic are profoundly linked to unique physiological adaptations within the Inuit population.12 Scientific research has identified specific genetic mutations in the Greenlandic Inuit genome that have adapted them to the severe cold and their traditional diet, which is rich in omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids derived from marine mammals.12
These genetic differences govern how the body metabolizes fat and are estimated to have been subjected to natural selection pressures for approximately 20,000 years, beginning in ancestors residing in or around Beringia.12 The mutations are seen in nearly 100% of the Inuit population, compared to a negligible percentage in European populations.12 These adaptations allow the Inuit to counteract potentially negative health effects of an extremely high-fat diet, resulting in a historically low incidence of cardiovascular disease.12 These genetic factors are also associated with resulting phenotypic traits, such as shorter stature, a side effect of the cold-adapted metabolism.13
This evidence confirms that the success of traditional Inuit child-rearing methods—which include reliance on a high-fat marine diet for energy and warmth 2—is not solely a matter of cultural knowledge but is deeply integrated with biological evolution. The specialized metabolism of Inuit infants and children allows them to efficiently process the nutrient-dense traditional food necessary for survival.2 This demonstrates a robust biocultural adaptation where physiology, traditional food sources, and physical parenting practices (like the Amauti) co-evolved to maximize child survival in extreme conditions. Disrupting this evolved nutritional system, through forced changes in diet or environment, may introduce unanticipated health vulnerabilities for the population.
III. Contemporary Infant Health, Vulnerability, and Social Determinants
While traditional Inunnguiniq practices emphasize resilience and communal health, contemporary Inuit families in Greenland face significant structural challenges rooted in socio-economic inequality and the enduring impacts of colonialism. These conditions act as powerful social determinants that impede the capacity for healthy child-rearing.
A. Current Health Status and Determinants of Health
Analyses of child health indicate that Inuit children often experience poorer health outcomes when compared to their non-Aboriginal counterparts.15 However, a complex picture emerges: most Inuit children under the age of six are reported by their parents or guardians to be in "excellent or very good health".15 This parental assessment of high well-being exists despite documented structural disadvantages.
Common chronic conditions identified in this population include asthma, allergies, lactose intolerance, hearing impairment, and speech/language difficulties.15 Crucially, the health status of Inuit children is strongly associated with socioeconomic and household factors, including parental education levels, household income, breastfeeding frequency, and perceived housing conditions.15 This confirms that structural deficits, rather than inherent cultural deficiencies, are driving health disparities.
The discrepancy between perceived parental vigilance and resilience (reflected in positive health ratings) and documented structural deficits (poverty, poor housing, scarce mental health support 16) underscores a profound resilience paradox. The cultural strength derived from Inunnguiniq, which emphasizes holistic well-being and capability, compels parents to maintain strong vigilance.1 However, this cultural effort is constantly challenged by overwhelming systemic neglect and lack of infrastructure.15
B. Structural Vulnerabilities and Knowledge Erosion
Greenlandic society continues to struggle with pervasive issues that directly compromise child welfare, including severe poverty, inadequate housing, and a pronounced lack of quality education and accessible mental health support.16 Overcrowded housing, a common outcome of poverty and insufficient housing policies, is specifically identified as a vulnerability that increases the risk of illness transmission among multiple generations within the home.11
Furthermore, the transmission of crucial Indigenous knowledge is being eroded by modern environmental and infrastructural challenges. Climate change impacts are threatening infrastructure and food sources.17 This, coupled with modernization, leads to decreased knowledge transmission among caregivers regarding traditional food preparation and water safety.11 Since the successful rearing of children in the Arctic relies heavily on the integrity of traditional knowledge systems (including diet, local remedies, and environmental navigation) 2, the loss of language and cultural knowledge directly contributes to a diminished capacity for adaptation and resilience, thereby increasing vulnerability to health threats.
C. Community-Based Care and Language Maintenance
In contrast to the structural deficiencies, the fundamental practice of Inunnguiniq maintains that raising a child must be a holistic endeavor that requires shared responsibility among the entire community surrounding the child.3 This collective approach is essential for ensuring that the child is meaningfully connected to their culture, community, and identity.3
Efforts to promote traditional cultural values and the use of the Inuit language within childcare arrangements are crucial for counteracting assimilation pressures.19 Language preservation in early childhood settings is recognized as vital for identity formation and ensuring the continuity of the specialized cultural and environmental knowledge necessary for the child’s successful maturation within the Inuit context.19
IV. The Enduring Shadow of Assimilation and Structural Bias
The greatest contemporary challenge to the integrity of Kalaallit child-rearing is the persistent legacy of Danish colonial control, which continues to manifest through structural bias, reproductive coercion, and systemic fracturing of Indigenous families.
A. Historical Legacy of Forced Assimilation
Denmark’s historical relationship with Greenland is characterized by cultural dominance and extensive attempts at forced assimilation, which laid the groundwork for today’s societal fractures.20 Although formal colonial rule concluded in 1953, the Danish government maintained significant influence, prioritizing Danish language, values, and institutions while marginalizing traditional Inuit customs.20
The most notorious example of this colonial mindset was the 1951 'Little Danes' experiment. In this controversial social experiment, 22 Inuit children, aged five to nine, were forcibly removed from their families in Greenland and transported to Denmark.20 The explicit goal was to assimilate them into Danish culture and prepare them for roles in a Danish-dominated society.20 These actions deliberately severed the children’s ties to their Indigenous heritage, inflicting severe, long-term psychological and cultural damage on both the children and the communities they were removed from.20 The psychological fracturing stemming from this period continues to destabilize community structures and impede the holistic socialization inherent in Inunnguiniq.20
B. Contemporary Structural Discrimination and Reproductive Coercion
Structural and systematic racial discrimination against the Inuit people remain significant barriers to fully enjoying human rights in both Greenland and Denmark.16 This structural bias has been documented through recent human rights investigations.
Of particular concern are reports detailing violations of reproductive autonomy. Testimonies from Inuit women reveal instances where Danish health care providers inserted intrauterine devices (IUDs) without the women’s knowledge or consent, with some victims being as young as 12 years old.16 This historical and continued abuse constitutes a severe human rights violation and an attack on the capacity for family formation.16 Such state-sponsored trauma generates profound mistrust in public health institutions, limits the willingness of individuals to seek necessary care, and contributes significantly to the intergenerational trauma that destabilizes the family units meant to carry out the core responsibilities of Inunnguiniq.
C. The Child Welfare Crisis and Weaponization of Trauma
The colonial legacy is most visibly perpetuated today through the child welfare system. Greenlandic children are vastly overrepresented in Denmark’s foster care system: 7% of children born in Greenland, and 5% of children with at least one Greenlandic parent, are placed in alternative care, compared to just 1% of other children.20
This disproportionate removal rate is fueled by systemic bias within assessment procedures. Assessments used to justify child removals, such as the forældrekompetenceundersøgelse (parenting capability tests), have been identified as reflecting a Eurocentric perspective on parenting.20 These tests inherently fail to recognize and value the collective, community-based approaches that are integral to Inuit culture and the philosophy of Inunnguiniq.20
This systemic flaw is aggravated by the high social dysfunction resulting from generations of colonial trauma. Greenland currently struggles with crisis levels of social vulnerability, including pervasive poverty, scarce mental health services, and distressingly high rates of exposure to violence and sexual abuse (estimated at 20% of children), alongside one of the highest suicide rates globally.16 The core tragedy is that colonial policies caused severe social destabilization, and the subsequent child welfare system uses the symptoms of this trauma (e.g., poverty, structural violence, and inadequate housing) as the primary justification for removing children from their families.16 This practice fundamentally misinterprets traditional collective care as parental inadequacy, ensuring a continuous and devastating cycle of cultural erasure and trauma that systematically dismantles the framework of Inunnguiniq. International obligations, such as the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), specify that removal must be in the best interest of the child but cannot be justified by the misuse of cultural differences.21
Table 3: Intergenerational Impact of Colonial Policies on Greenlandic Families
Policy/Action | Timeline | Description of Harm | Contemporary Impact on Child Welfare | Source |
The "Little Danes" Experiment | 1951 | Removal of 22 Inuit children for forced Danish assimilation and identity erasure | Generational trauma; psychological fracturing; social instability 20 | 20 |
Forced IUD Insertion | Mid-20th Century to present (Reported) | Non-consensual insertion of contraceptives in young Inuit women | Distrust of health systems; attack on reproductive autonomy; demographic impact 16 | 16 |
Eurocentric Parenting Assessments | Ongoing until recent repeal | Use of Danish/Eurocentric tests failing to recognize Inuit collective care 21 | Vast overrepresentation of Inuit children (7% vs 1%) in alternative care 20 | 20 |
V. Multimedia Documentation and Policy Recommendations
The practices and challenges associated with Kalaallit infant rearing are documented both academically and visually, offering vital context for understanding their complexity.
A. Visual and Documentary Evidence
Documentary resources provide crucial visual and ethnographic documentation of Inuit life, child-rearing methods, and the impacts of systemic injustice. Videos illustrate how traditional wisdom and deep knowledge of the land allow families to thrive despite freezing temperatures, relying on warm, layered animal skin clothing and a high-fat diet.2 These materials often depict the close, constant physical interaction central to traditional care, such as a Greenlandic mother using specialized greetings and communicating in Greenlandic with her child.22
Documentaries also address the inter-generational trauma resulting from the child welfare system and highlight community-based approaches focused on healing and connecting children meaningfully to their culture and identity, offering an essential counter-narrative to colonial interventions.18 These resources provide invaluable insight into the enduring resilience of the community structure.
● Video Reference: Inuit Survival and Child-Rearing in Extreme Conditions
○ Title: How Inuit Raise Children At $-84^{\circ}\text{F}$ ($-64^{\circ}\text{C}$)
○ URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CtJGaT-8G6s 2
● Video Reference: Healing and Cultural Connection in Child Welfare
○ Title: Journey Home explores healing Indigenous children in the Canadian child welfare system.
○ URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-q4VepX4vU 18
B. Conclusions and Policy Imperatives
The scientific and socio-cultural analysis of Greenlandic Inuit infant rearing reveals a highly evolved, philosophically coherent system (Inunnguiniq) designed for environmental and collective survival. The success of these traditional practices, underpinned by biocultural adaptations like the Amauti and unique genetic resilience to diet, stands in stark contrast to the severe vulnerabilities introduced by ongoing structural discrimination.
The overwhelming disproportionality of Inuit children in alternative care, coupled with historical atrocities like the 'Little Danes' experiment and forced IUD insertion, demonstrates that the challenge facing Greenlandic families is primarily one of structural racism and the weaponization of colonial trauma, not parental deficiency.
Based on these findings, and aligned with recommendations from United Nations experts, several policy imperatives are critical for safeguarding the rights and cultural integrity of Kalaallit children:
1. Decolonization of Child Welfare Assessment: The systematic structural bias in family removal procedures must be permanently eliminated. This requires replacing Eurocentric psychometric tests with assessment frameworks based directly on Inunnguiniq and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, which recognize the validity and necessity of collective, community-based care models.20
2. Addressing Social Determinants of Health: Governments must initiate substantial investment in addressing the root causes of family vulnerability, specifically focusing on eliminating poverty, providing adequate, non-overcrowded housing, developing quality, culturally appropriate education systems, and establishing accessible mental health support across Greenland.15
3. Mandating Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC): Mechanisms must be established immediately to ensure that Inuit have the right to free, prior, and informed consent in all governance decisions, including the allocation of tourism concessions, the implementation of business projects (such as mining expansion), and the adoption of legislative acts that directly affect their traditional livelihoods and family structures.16
4. Truth and Healing: Formal, substantive acknowledgement and reparations must be pursued for the historical actions of forced assimilation and non-consensual reproductive control, which have inflicted intergenerational trauma and undermined the stability required for effective Inunnguiniq implementation.16 Review of procedures for assessing out-of-home care must be undertaken to address structural bias within social authorities.16
Works cited
1. InunnguInIq: CARING FoR CHILDREN THE INUIT WAY - National ..., accessed October 23, 2025, http://www.nccah-ccnsa.ca/docs/fact%20sheets/child%20and%20youth/Inuit%20caring%20EN%20web.pdf
2. How Inuit Raise Children At -84°F (-64°C) - YouTube, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CtJGaT-8G6s
3. Full article: Parents' perspectives on the role of kin in child-rearing: a qualitative study on Greenland's universal parenting programme MANU, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/22423982.2023.2225720
4. Family Structures | Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada, accessed October 23, 2025, https://indigenouspeoplesatlasofcanada.ca/article/youth-and-elders/
5. THE INUIT WAY, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.relations-inuit.chaire.ulaval.ca/sites/relations-inuit.chaire.ulaval.ca/files/InuitWay_e.pdf
6. Examining Evidence for Autonomy and Relatedness in Urban Inuit Parenting - PMC, accessed October 23, 2025, https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3741159/
7. Amauti - Wikipedia, accessed October 23, 2025, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amauti
8. Anatomy of An Amauti | Up Here Publishing, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.uphere.ca/articles/anatomy-amauti
9. Inuit culture - Wikipedia, accessed October 23, 2025, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_culture
10. Early Inuit Child Health in Canada - Report 1-Sleep Practices among Inuit Infants and the Prevention of SIDS, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.itk.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/2011-Report-Sleep-Practices-among-Inuit-Infants-and-the-Prevention-of-SIDS.pdf
11. Adapting to the Effects of Climate Change on Inuit Health - PMC - PubMed Central, accessed October 23, 2025, https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4035894/
12. How the Inuit adapted to Ice Age living and a high-fat diet | UCL News, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2015/sep/how-inuit-adapted-ice-age-living-and-high-fat-diet
13. High-fat diet made Inuits healthier but shorter thanks to gene mutations, study finds, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.ox.ac.uk/research/high-fat-diet-made-inuits-healthier-shorter-thanks-gene-mutations-study-finds
14. Adaptation to high-fat diet, cold had profound effect on Inuit, including shorter height, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/09/150917160034.htm
15. The health of Inuit children under age 6 in Canada - PMC, accessed October 23, 2025, https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3417691/
16. Denmark and Greenland: UN expert calls for greater effort to create inclusive societies, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2023/02/denmark-and-greenland-un-expert-calls-greater-effort-create-inclusive
17. Climate Change and the Health of Indigenous Populations | US EPA, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.epa.gov/climateimpacts/climate-change-and-health-indigenous-populations
18. Journey Home - YouTube, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-q4VepX4vU
19. Indigenous early childhood development in Canada: Current state of knowledge and future directions, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.nccih.ca/docs/health/RPT-ECD-PHAC-Greenwood-Halseth-EN.pdf
20. Denmark's experiment on Inuit children: a painful legacy of forced assimilation - Humanium, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.humanium.org/en/denmarks-experiment-on-inuit-children-a-painful-legacy-of-forced-assimilation/
21. Culture misunderstood, families separated - Leiden Law Blog, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.leidenlawblog.nl/articles/culture-misunderstood-families-separated
22. 'The nurse told me I couldn't keep my baby': how a controversial Danish 'parenting test' separated a Greenlandic woman from her children - The Guardian, accessed October 23, 2025, https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2025/jun/29/controversial-danish-parenting-test-separated-greenlandic-mother-children
