Storying and re-storying: Co-creating Indigenous well-being through Relational Knowledge Exchange

IF 0.5 Q3 AREA STUDIES
J. S. Ullrich, L. Demientieff, Emma-Jane Elliott
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article presents three Indigenous scholars’ academic research on Indigenous well-being and describes our personal journeys in relation to the knowledge received from our communities. LaVerne Xilegg Demientieff shares the Five Cs of Healing-Centered Engagement, Jessica Saniġaq Ullrich shares the Indigenous Connectedness Framework, and Emma Elliott shares her observations about the relationality of well-being. As Indigenous scholars, we each have put ancestral knowledge and practices about health and well-being into action through our own lives and relationships for better dissemination and utility of the research. In this article, we engage in storytelling about learning, living, and sharing the teachings of Indigenous well-being that highlights the relational knowledge exchange among researchers, knowledge bearers, and beloved community. It is not enough to learn and gain knowledge and new perspectives; this knowledge must be shared and applied to real life so that the social and environmental justice, healing, and relational changes that communities yearn for become a reality.
故事和再故事:通过关系知识交流共同创造土著福祉
摘要本文介绍了三位土著学者对土著福祉的学术研究,并描述了我们从社区获得的知识的个人历程。LaVerne Xilegg Dementieff分享了以治疗为中心的参与的五个C,Jessica Saniġaq Ullrich分享了土著联系框架,Emma Elliott分享了她对幸福感相对性的观察。作为土著学者,我们每个人都通过自己的生活和关系,将祖先关于健康和福祉的知识和实践付诸行动,以更好地传播和利用研究。在这篇文章中,我们讲述了学习、生活和分享土著福祉的故事,强调了研究人员、知识持有者和受人爱戴的社区之间的关系知识交流。仅仅学习和获得知识和新观点是不够的;这些知识必须被分享并应用到现实生活中,这样社区渴望的社会和环境正义、治愈和关系变革才能成为现实。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: American Nineteenth Century History is a peer-reviewed, transatlantic journal devoted to the history of the United States during the long nineteenth century. It welcomes contributions on themes and topics relating to America in this period: slavery, race and ethnicity, the Civil War and Reconstruction, military history, American nationalism, urban history, immigration and ethnicity, western history, the history of women, gender studies, African Americans and Native Americans, cultural studies and comparative pieces. In addition to articles based on original research, historiographical pieces, reassessments of historical controversies, and reappraisals of prominent events or individuals are welcome. Special issues devoted to a particular theme or topic will also be considered.
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