Big-Canoe Katie, Richmond Chantelle A M
Department of Geography, The University of Western Ontario, Canada, N6A 5C2.
Department of Geography, The University of Western Ontario, Canada, N6A 5C2.
Health Place. 2014 Mar;26:127-35. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2013.12.013. Epub 2013 Dec 31.
This community-based research applied environmental dispossession as a theoretical framework for understanding Anishinabe youth perceptions about health, social relationships and contemporary Anishinabe way of life in Northern Ontario, Canada. Qualitative interviews with 19 youth reveal considerable worry about their community's health. Youth perceive changes in the Anishinabe way of life, including decreased access to their traditional lands, to be central to poor health at the community level. Youth emphasized the importance of social relationships for fostering healthy behaviours and developing community wide initiatives that will provide opportunities for reconnecting to land, and for learning and practicing Indigenous Knowledge. This study builds on the growing body of decolonizing research with Indigenous communities, and it concludes by offering the concept of environmental repossession as a way forward for studies on the Indigenous environment-health interface.
这项基于社区的研究将环境剥夺作为一种理论框架,用以理解加拿大安大略省北部的阿尼什纳比青年对健康、社会关系以及当代阿尼什纳比生活方式的看法。对19名青年进行的定性访谈揭示了他们对所在社区健康状况的深切担忧。青年们认为阿尼什纳比生活方式的变化,包括获取传统土地的机会减少,是社区层面健康状况不佳的核心因素。青年们强调了社会关系对于培养健康行为以及开展全社区倡议的重要性,这些倡议将为重新与土地建立联系、学习和实践本土知识提供机会。本研究建立在与原住民社区开展的去殖民化研究不断增加的基础之上,并通过提出环境收复的概念作为研究原住民环境与健康关系的未来方向来得出结论。