Neufeld Hannah Tait, Richmond Chantelle
School of Public Health and Health Systems, The University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Geography, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Curr Dev Nutr. 2020 Feb 5;4(3):nzaa011. doi: 10.1093/cdn/nzaa011. eCollection 2020 Mar.
The ongoing negative health effects of colonization have disproportionately affected Indigenous women, who are disproportionately affected by diabetes, food insecurity, and undernutrition. Indigenous women also perceive their health less positively than men do. This article draws theoretically from the socio-ecological model to explore health inequalities experienced by Indigenous women associated with the intergenerational effects of the residential school legacy, specifically related to food practices.
Study objectives were to describe and compare the historical context of present-day urban and rural food environments, and explore the hypothesis that food insecurity may be associated with cultural loss resulting from the intergenerational trauma of residential schools in this region of southwestern Ontario, Canada.
Framed by a larger community-based participatory study, life history interviews took place with 18 Elder women living on- and off-reserve in southwestern Ontario, Canada.
Women discussed painful circumstances of displacement from the land and social disconnection from families and communities. The 10 participants who were residential school survivors conveyed the intergenerational effects of loss, responsibility, lack of support, and an altered sense of identity as narratives of survival. Six women had moved away from their home communities, which created challenges to fully engage in local food procurement and sharing practices. These altered geographies present practical limitations, along with apparent mechanisms of social and cultural exclusion.
Research on Indigenous Peoples' food systems requires further analysis of the root causes of disparities in the context of societal and gender relations. Food sovereignty has been the domain of women, who have led movements aimed at both social and environmental justice. Unraveling the historical, social, and environmental determinants of Indigenous food knowledge will support and guide community and policy recommendations, highlighting the ongoing effects of residential schooling and other indirect examples of environmental dispossession that have disproportionately affected Indigenous women.
殖民化对健康产生的持续负面影响对原住民女性的影响尤为严重,她们在糖尿病、粮食不安全和营养不良方面受到的影响尤为突出。与男性相比,原住民女性对自身健康的认知也较为消极。本文从社会生态模型出发进行理论探讨,以探究与寄宿学校遗留问题的代际影响相关的原住民女性所经历的健康不平等现象,特别是与饮食习俗相关的问题。
研究目的是描述和比较当今城乡饮食环境的历史背景,并探讨粮食不安全可能与加拿大安大略省西南部该地区寄宿学校代际创伤导致的文化丧失相关这一假设。
以一项更大规模的社区参与式研究为框架,对居住在加拿大安大略省西南部保留地内外的18名老年女性进行了生活史访谈。
女性们讲述了被迫离开土地的痛苦经历以及与家庭和社区的社会脱节。10名寄宿学校幸存者参与者讲述了失去、责任、缺乏支持以及身份认同感改变等代际影响,作为她们的生存故事。6名女性离开了家乡社区,这给她们充分参与当地粮食采购和分享活动带来了挑战。这些地域变化带来了实际限制,以及明显的社会和文化排斥机制。
对原住民食物系统的研究需要在社会和性别关系背景下进一步分析差异的根源。食物主权一直是女性的领域,她们领导了旨在实现社会和环境正义的运动。理清原住民食物知识的历史、社会和环境决定因素将支持并指导社区和政策建议,突出寄宿学校教育的持续影响以及其他对原住民女性影响尤为严重的环境剥夺间接例子。