School of Public Health Sciences, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue W, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
Department of Family Relations & Applied Nutrition, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
Nutrients. 2022 Apr 22;14(9):1737. doi: 10.3390/nu14091737.
There are collective movements of Indigenous food sovereignty (IFS) initiatives taking up place and space within urban environments across the Grand River Territory, within southern Ontario, Canada. Indigenous Peoples living within urban centres are often displaced from their home territories and are seeking opportunities to reconnect with culture and identity through Land and food. This research was guided by Indigenous research methodologies and applied community-based participatory research to highlight experiences from seven Indigenous community members engaged in IFS programming and practice. Thematic analysis revealed four inter-related themes illustrated by a conceptual model: Land-based knowledge and relationships; Land and food-based practices; relational principles; and place. Participants engaged in five Land and food-based practices (seed saving; growing and gathering food; hunting and fishing; processing and preserving food; and sharing and distributing), guided by three relational principles (responsibility, relationality, and reciprocity), framed by the social and physical environments of the place. Key findings revealed that employing self-determined processes to grow, harvest, and share food among the Indigenous community provide pathways towards IFS. This study is the first to explore urban IFS initiatives within this region, offering a novel understanding of how these initiatives are taking shape within urban environments.
在加拿大安大略省南部大格兰德河地区的城市环境中,有许多集体的原住民食物主权倡议正在开展并占据一席之地。生活在城市中心的原住民常常被从他们的家园驱逐出去,他们正在通过土地和食物寻找与文化和身份重新建立联系的机会。本研究以原住民研究方法为指导,并应用基于社区的参与式研究,突出了参与原住民食物主权项目和实践的 7 名原住民社区成员的经验。通过一个概念模型,主题分析揭示了四个相互关联的主题:基于土地的知识和关系;基于土地和食物的实践;关系原则;以及地点。参与者从事五种基于土地和食物的实践(种子保存;种植和采集食物;狩猎和捕鱼;加工和保存食物;以及分享和分配食物),由三个关系原则(责任、关系和互惠)指导,由地点的社会和物理环境构成。主要发现表明,原住民社区采用自主决定的过程来种植、收获和分享食物,为原住民食物主权提供了途径。这项研究首次探索了该地区的城市原住民食物主权倡议,为了解这些倡议如何在城市环境中形成提供了新的认识。