Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People

The purpose of this literature review is to understand what disconnection means for Indigenous people and to understand what we presently know about addressing this disconnection. Since colonization, Indigenous people have experienced disconnection in various ways such as forced assimilation. Throug...

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Main Author: Peacock, Ellen
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: City University of Seattle (CityU) 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/1758
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author Peacock, Ellen
author_facet Peacock, Ellen
author_sort Peacock, Ellen
collection National University System Repository
description The purpose of this literature review is to understand what disconnection means for Indigenous people and to understand what we presently know about addressing this disconnection. Since colonization, Indigenous people have experienced disconnection in various ways such as forced assimilation. Through multiple facets of assimilation and policies that enforce assimilation, a disconnect has been created for many Indigenous people from culture, tradition, language, land, and community. The author analyzed nine qualitative studies and one mixed-methods study. The author analyzed the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used within the studies. From the findings emerged four themes: a) the use of the medicine wheel as a holistic approach; b) connection to the land and healing; c) tradition and spirituality; d) resilience and reclamation. The themes that emerged are all relevant to approaches that are beneficial in promoting Indigenous well-being. As well, the author examines the ethics within the 10 selected studies. Finally, the author discusses the present context, clinical application, and recommendations for future research. This literature review demonstrates that utilizing non-Western approaches promotes well-being for Indigenous people.
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genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
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spelling ftnatunivlajolla:oai:https://repository.nusystem.org:20.500.11803/1758 2025-01-16T21:56:14+00:00 Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People Peacock, Ellen 2021 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/1758 en eng City University of Seattle (CityU) http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/1758 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/ indigenous indigenous well-being disconnection First Nations well-being traditional approaches Capstone 2021 ftnatunivlajolla https://doi.org/20.500.11803/1758 2024-12-31T04:06:36Z The purpose of this literature review is to understand what disconnection means for Indigenous people and to understand what we presently know about addressing this disconnection. Since colonization, Indigenous people have experienced disconnection in various ways such as forced assimilation. Through multiple facets of assimilation and policies that enforce assimilation, a disconnect has been created for many Indigenous people from culture, tradition, language, land, and community. The author analyzed nine qualitative studies and one mixed-methods study. The author analyzed the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used within the studies. From the findings emerged four themes: a) the use of the medicine wheel as a holistic approach; b) connection to the land and healing; c) tradition and spirituality; d) resilience and reclamation. The themes that emerged are all relevant to approaches that are beneficial in promoting Indigenous well-being. As well, the author examines the ethics within the 10 selected studies. Finally, the author discusses the present context, clinical application, and recommendations for future research. This literature review demonstrates that utilizing non-Western approaches promotes well-being for Indigenous people. Other/Unknown Material First Nations National University System Repository
spellingShingle indigenous
indigenous well-being
disconnection
First Nations
well-being
traditional approaches
Peacock, Ellen
Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People
title Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People
title_full Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People
title_fullStr Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People
title_full_unstemmed Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People
title_short Disconnection and Well-being of Indigenous People
title_sort disconnection and well-being of indigenous people
topic indigenous
indigenous well-being
disconnection
First Nations
well-being
traditional approaches
topic_facet indigenous
indigenous well-being
disconnection
First Nations
well-being
traditional approaches
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/1758