Using Boundary Objects to Co-Create Community Health and Water Knowledge with Community-Based Medical Anthropology and Indigenous Knowledge

Sarah Duignan, T. Moffat, Dawn Martin-Hill
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This article explores how Indigenous Knowledge and medical anthropology can co-construct community health knowledge through boundary work and the use of boundary objects. It will highlight how community-based participatory research (CBPR) in medical anthropology can help co-develop methods and strategies with Indigenous research partners to assess the human health impact of the First Nations water crisis. We draw on a case study of our community-based approach to health research with Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation community stakeholders and McMaster University researchers. We highlight how framing a co-constructed health survey as a boundary object can create dialogical space for Indigenous and western academic pedagogies and priorities. We also explore how this CBPR anthropology approach, informed by Indigenous Knowledge, allows for deeper foundations of culturally centered health to guide our work in identifying current and future community health needs concerning these ongoing water contamination and access issues. Through three health survey versions, priorities and research questions shifted and expanded to suit growing community health priorities. This led to collaborative action to communicate specific messages around water contamination and access across governance, community, and institutional boundaries. We demonstrate how our co-constructed approach and boundary work allows for the respectful and reciprocal development of these long-term research partnerships and works in solidarity with the Two-Row Wampum (Kaswentha) treaty established by the Haudenosaunee Nation and European settler nations. 
利用边界对象与社区医学人类学和土著知识共同创造社区健康和水知识
本文探讨原住民知识与医学人类学如何透过边界工作与边界物件的使用,共同建构社群健康知识。它将强调医学人类学领域基于社区的参与性研究如何能够帮助与土著研究伙伴共同制定方法和战略,以评估第一民族水危机对人类健康的影响。我们借鉴了我们与大河第一民族社区利益相关者和麦克马斯特大学研究人员合作的以社区为基础的健康研究方法的案例研究。我们强调如何将共同构建的健康调查框架作为边界对象,为土著和西方学术教学法和优先事项创造对话空间。我们还探讨了这种CBPR人类学方法如何在土著知识的指导下,为以文化为中心的健康提供更深入的基础,以指导我们在确定当前和未来社区对这些持续水污染和获取问题的健康需求方面的工作。通过三个健康调查版本,优先事项和研究问题转移和扩大,以适应日益增长的社区卫生优先事项。这导致了跨治理、社区和机构边界就水污染和获取问题交流具体信息的合作行动。我们展示了我们共同构建的方法和边界工作如何允许这些长期研究伙伴关系的尊重和互惠发展,并与豪德诺松尼民族和欧洲定居者国家建立的两排Wampum (Kaswentha)条约团结一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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