“我们都认识彼此”:以优势为基础来理解皮图登陆原住民的社会资本

IF 1.2 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Sharon Yeung, H. Castleden, Pictou Landing First Nation
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引用次数: 0

摘要

30多年来,人们对加拿大和世界各地土著人民的健康问题给予了关注,开展了大量的健康研究,其中许多研究强调了差距的经验,而忽视了优势。在本案例研究中,我们对主流健康研究中以损害为中心的修辞提出了挑战,报告了20次对Pictou Landing First Nation(位于加拿大新斯科舍省的一个米克马族民族)成员进行的社区力量和健康定性访谈的结果。然后,我们将这些发现与土著社会资本的新兴概念联系起来并进行比较,土著社会资本是一个在各种情况下与积极健康结果相关的概念。我们的研究结果表明,熟悉、互惠、安全和团结的品质强化了皮图登陆第一民族,这些品质根植于家庭的价值,并嵌入到更广泛的米克马世界观中。这些优势的性质在一定程度上与土著社会资本的概念相一致,我们认为可以更好地利用土著社会资本作为开展基于优势的健康研究的手段。为此,我们的研究结果支持需要重新设计社会资本概念,以更强烈地集中文化身份和世界观,以便真实和全面地肯定土著和非殖民化的健康研究实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“We all know each other”: A Strengths-based Approach to Understanding Social Capital in Pictou Landing First Nation
With over three decades of attention drawn to the health of Indigenous peoples in Canada and around the world, an outpouring of health research has been undertaken, much of which has emphasized the experience of disparity at the expense of recognizing strengths. In this case study, we challenge the damage-centred rhetoric of mainstream health research by reporting the findings of 20 qualitative interviews on community strength and health with members of Pictou Landing First Nation, a Mi’kmaw nation located in Nova Scotia, Canada. We then relate and compare these findings with the emerging conceptualization of Indigenous social capital, which is a concept that has been associated with positive health outcomes in a variety of contexts. Our findings indicate that Pictou Landing First Nation is strengthened by qualities of familiarity, reciprocity, safety, and solidarity, which are rooted in the value of family and embedded within a broader Mi’kmaw worldview. The nature of these strengths aligns in part with the concept of Indigenous social capital, which we suggest may be better harnessed to be a means for conducting strengths-based health research. To this end, our findings support the need for reworking social capital conceptualizations to more strongly centralize cultural identities and worldviews in order to authentically and comprehensively affirm Indigenous and decolonizing health research practices.
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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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