Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration

Abstract Background Population and environmental health research illustrate a positive relationship between access to greenspace or natural environments and peoples’ perceived health, mental health, resilience, and overall well-being. This relationship is also particularly strong among Canadian Indi...

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Published in:BMC Public Health
Main Authors: Hatala, Andrew R, Njeze, Chinyere, Morton, Darrien, Pearl, Tamara, Bird-Naytowhow, Kelley
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/34666
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08647-z
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/34666 2023-06-18T03:40:39+02:00 Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration Hatala, Andrew R Njeze, Chinyere Morton, Darrien Pearl, Tamara Bird-Naytowhow, Kelley 2020-05-01T03:31:34Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/34666 https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08647-z en eng BMC Public Health. 2020 Apr 20;20(1):538 https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08647-z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/34666 open access The Author(s) Journal Article 2020 ftunivmanitoba https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08647-z 2023-06-04T17:38:31Z Abstract Background Population and environmental health research illustrate a positive relationship between access to greenspace or natural environments and peoples’ perceived health, mental health, resilience, and overall well-being. This relationship is also particularly strong among Canadian Indigenous populations and social determinants of health research where notions of land, health, and nature can involve broader spiritual and cultural meanings. Among Indigenous youth health and resilience scholarship, however, research tends to conceptualize land and nature as rural phenomena without any serious consideration on their impacts within urban cityscapes. This study contributes to current literature by exploring Indigenous youths’ meaning-making processes and engagements with land and nature in an urban Canadian context. Methods Through photovoice and modified Grounded Theory methodology, this study explored urban Indigenous youth perspectives about health and resilience within an inner-city Canadian context. Over the course of one year, thirty-eight in-depth interviews were conducted with Indigenous (Plains Cree First Nations and Métis) youth along with photovoice arts-based and talking circle methodologies that occurred once per season. The research approach was also informed by Etuaptmumk or a “two-eyed seeing” framework where Indigenous and Western “ways of knowing” (worldviews) can work alongside one another. Results Our strength-based analyses illustrated that engagement with and a connection to nature, either by way of being present in nature and viewing nature in their local urban context, was a central aspect of the young peoples’ photos and their stories about those photos. This article focuses on three of the main themes that emerged from the youth photos and follow-up interviews: (1) nature as a calming place; (2) building metaphors of resilience; and (3) providing a sense of hope. These local processes were shown to help youth cope with stress, anger, fear, and other general difficult situations ... Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations MSpace at the University of Manitoba BMC Public Health 20 1
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collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
description Abstract Background Population and environmental health research illustrate a positive relationship between access to greenspace or natural environments and peoples’ perceived health, mental health, resilience, and overall well-being. This relationship is also particularly strong among Canadian Indigenous populations and social determinants of health research where notions of land, health, and nature can involve broader spiritual and cultural meanings. Among Indigenous youth health and resilience scholarship, however, research tends to conceptualize land and nature as rural phenomena without any serious consideration on their impacts within urban cityscapes. This study contributes to current literature by exploring Indigenous youths’ meaning-making processes and engagements with land and nature in an urban Canadian context. Methods Through photovoice and modified Grounded Theory methodology, this study explored urban Indigenous youth perspectives about health and resilience within an inner-city Canadian context. Over the course of one year, thirty-eight in-depth interviews were conducted with Indigenous (Plains Cree First Nations and Métis) youth along with photovoice arts-based and talking circle methodologies that occurred once per season. The research approach was also informed by Etuaptmumk or a “two-eyed seeing” framework where Indigenous and Western “ways of knowing” (worldviews) can work alongside one another. Results Our strength-based analyses illustrated that engagement with and a connection to nature, either by way of being present in nature and viewing nature in their local urban context, was a central aspect of the young peoples’ photos and their stories about those photos. This article focuses on three of the main themes that emerged from the youth photos and follow-up interviews: (1) nature as a calming place; (2) building metaphors of resilience; and (3) providing a sense of hope. These local processes were shown to help youth cope with stress, anger, fear, and other general difficult situations ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hatala, Andrew R
Njeze, Chinyere
Morton, Darrien
Pearl, Tamara
Bird-Naytowhow, Kelley
spellingShingle Hatala, Andrew R
Njeze, Chinyere
Morton, Darrien
Pearl, Tamara
Bird-Naytowhow, Kelley
Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration
author_facet Hatala, Andrew R
Njeze, Chinyere
Morton, Darrien
Pearl, Tamara
Bird-Naytowhow, Kelley
author_sort Hatala, Andrew R
title Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration
title_short Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration
title_full Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration
title_fullStr Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration
title_full_unstemmed Land and nature as sources of health and resilience among Indigenous youth in an urban Canadian context: a photovoice exploration
title_sort land and nature as sources of health and resilience among indigenous youth in an urban canadian context: a photovoice exploration
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/34666
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08647-z
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation BMC Public Health. 2020 Apr 20;20(1):538
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08647-z
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/34666
op_rights open access
The Author(s)
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08647-z
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