Colonial Trauma: Complex, continuous, collective, cumulative and compounding effects on the health of Indigenous Peoples in Canada and beyond

IF 1.2 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
T. Mitchell
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引用次数: 30

Abstract

Indigenous peoples across the globe suffer a disproportionate burden of both mental and physical illness relative to Settler populations. A substantial body of research indicates that colonialism and its associated processes are important determinants of Indigenous peoples' health. In Canada, despite an abundance of health research documenting inequalities in morbidity and mortality rates for Indigenous peoples, relatively little research has focused on the political, historical, cultural basis of health disparities. This paper advances a theory of colonial trauma as a conceptual framework with which to understand Indigenous health and mental health disparities. Colonial Trauma is described as a complex, continuous, collective, cumulative and compounding interaction of impacts related to the imposition of colonial policies and practices which continue to separate Indigenous Peoples from their land, languages, cultural practices, and one another. The theory of colonial trauma is presented as useful a framework for understanding the links between persistent health disparities, the traumagenic nature of colonialism and the right of self-determination.
殖民创伤:对加拿大内外土著人民的健康产生复杂、持续、集体、累积和复合的影响
与移民人口相比,全球各地的土著人民在精神和身体疾病方面承受着不成比例的负担。大量研究表明,殖民主义及其相关进程是土著人民健康的重要决定因素。在加拿大,尽管有大量的保健研究记录了土著人民发病率和死亡率方面的不平等现象,但侧重于保健差异的政治、历史和文化基础的研究相对较少。本文提出了一种殖民创伤理论,作为理解土著居民健康和心理健康差异的概念框架。殖民创伤被描述为与实施殖民政策和做法有关的复杂、持续、集体、累积和复合影响的相互作用,这些政策和做法继续将土著人民与其土地、语言、文化习俗分开,并彼此分开。殖民创伤理论被认为是一个有用的框架,有助于理解持续存在的健康差距、殖民主义的创伤性质和自决权之间的联系。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Indigenous Health
International Journal of Indigenous Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
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