Aging in Indigenous Canada (chapter)

Older Indigenous people are in a unique position within what is now Canada. With relationships to place that extend over millennia and shape the ways that communities are structured, as well as the ongoing challenges and oppressions of living within a colonial society that regulates much of everyday...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nelson, Sarah E.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@UNO 2021
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/geoggeolfacpub/93
https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/context/geoggeolfacpub/article/1092/viewcontent/Nelson___Aging_in_Indigenous_Canada_Feb_21_2020.pdf
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Summary:Older Indigenous people are in a unique position within what is now Canada. With relationships to place that extend over millennia and shape the ways that communities are structured, as well as the ongoing challenges and oppressions of living within a colonial society that regulates much of everyday life and limits opportunities in many Indigenous communities, aging for Indigenous individuals has multiple layers of complexity that involve both opportunities and challenges, and that relate closely to the places in which people live. “Indigenous peoples” is an umbrella term, used internationally to refer to the original peoples of a place. In Canada, “Indigenous peoples” include over 70 distinct language groups and hundreds of different nations (Statistics Canada 2017). In Canada, the Constitution Act recognizes three main Indigenous groups: First Nations, Métis, and Inuit (Government of Canada 1982), although each of these groups masks a huge amount of diversity, and Indigenous peoples generally prefer to be identified by nation – such as Cree; Mi’kmaq; or Omàmìwinninì – rather than as part of these larger groupings. The 2016 Census counted 1,673,785 Indigenous people in Canada, a number that grew by 42.5% since 2006, and Indigenous peoples now make up at least 4.9% of the overall population of Canada (Statistics Canada 2017). While the Indigenous population in general is younger than non-Indigenous populations in Canada, the proportion of Indigenous people aged 65 years or older is also increasing more quickly than in other populations, rising from 4.8% in 2006 to 7.3% in 2016 (Wilson, Rosenberg, and Abonyi 2011; Wilson et al. 2010; Statistics Canada 2017) (see Figure 1). This is giving rise to scholarship on a number of issues for older and aging Indigenous people, including urbanization and relationships to land (Wilson and Cardwell 2012); health disparities and experiences of dementia and memory loss (Bourassa et al. this volume; Bourassa et al. 2015; Hulko et al. 2010; Lanting et al. 2011; Warren et al. ...