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要是他们能访问这些数据就好了:政府未能监测纸浆厂对皮克图登陆第一民族的人类健康的影响。

If only they had accessed the data: Governmental failure to monitor pulp mill impacts on human health in Pictou Landing First Nation.

机构信息

Western University, 1151 Richmond Street, Room 3213, Social Science Centre, London, ON, N6A 5C2, Canada.

Pictou Landing Native Women's Group, Pictou Landing First Nation, 6533 Pictou Landing Rd #6, Trenton, NS B0K 1X0, Canada.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2021 Nov;288:113184. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113184. Epub 2020 Jul 15.

Abstract

For over fifty years, Pictou Landing First Nation (PLFN), a small Mi'kmaw community on the northern shore of mainland Nova Scotia, Canada, has been told by a Joint Environmental Health Monitoring Committee (JEHMC) mandated to oversee the health of the community that their health has not been impacted by exposure to 85 million litres of pulp mill effluent dumped every day into what was once a culturally significant body of water bordering their community. Yet, based on lived experience, the community knows otherwise, and despite countless dollars spent on government and industry-sponsored research, their concerns have not gone away. Using biopolitical theory, we explore why JEHMC never fully implemented its mandate. We will use a Mi'kmaw environmental 'theoretical' framework to demonstrate that indicators of a relational epistemology and ontology that have been consistently and persistently overlooked in Indigenous environmental health research demands that Indigenous connections to the air, land and water must be taken into consideration to get a full understanding of environmental health impacts. Guided by the principle of Etuaptmumk (Two-Eyed Seeing), which brings together the strengths of both western and Indigenous knowledge, and employing a community-based participatory research approach, we use data that could have been accessed by the JEHMC that might have signaled that human health studies were warranted. Further, we developed an environmental health survey that more appropriately assesses the impacts on the community. Finally, we will discuss how an Indigenous-developed framework can adequately assess the impacts of land displacement and environmental dispossession on the health of Indigenous communities and illustrate how our framework can serve as a guide to others when exploring Indigenous environmental health more broadly.

摘要

五十多年来,加拿大新斯科舍省大陆北岸的一个小型米克马克社区皮克图登陆第一民族(PLFN)一直被一个联合环境健康监测委员会(JEHMC)告知,该委员会的任务是监督社区的健康状况,尽管每天有 8500 万升纸浆厂废水排入曾经是他们社区边界的具有文化意义的水体,但他们的健康并未受到影响。然而,根据生活经验,社区知道事实并非如此。尽管政府和行业赞助的研究花费了无数资金,但他们的担忧并未消除。我们使用生物政治理论来探讨为什么 JEHMC 从未完全履行其任务。我们将使用米克马克环境“理论”框架来表明,关系认识论和本体论的指标在原住民环境健康研究中一直被一致且持续忽视,这要求必须考虑到原住民与空气、土地和水的联系,以充分了解环境健康影响。在“Etuaptmumk”(Two-Eyed Seeing)原则的指导下,该原则结合了西方和原住民知识的优势,并采用社区参与式研究方法,我们使用了原本可以被 JEHMC 访问的数据,这些数据可能表明有必要进行人类健康研究。此外,我们开发了一种更适当地评估对社区影响的环境健康调查。最后,我们将讨论一个由原住民开发的框架如何能够充分评估土地流离失所和环境剥夺对原住民社区健康的影响,并说明我们的框架如何在更广泛地探索原住民环境健康时为其他人提供指导。

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