"How can our children learn from us about our way of life or understand who they are?": Residential schools and their impact on the wellbeing of Indigenous youth in Attapadi, South India.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Transcultural Psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-25 DOI:10.1177/13634615231213834
Mathew Sunil George, K A Ramu, Rajendra Prasad, N S Prashanth, Susheela Kenjoor, Janie Busby Grant
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Abstract

Residential schools are commonly used in India to provide education for Indigenous youth, which requires young people to stay for long periods at distance from their families and communities. Internationally, there is clear evidence for the deleterious effects of residential schools on the mental health and social and community outcomes of Indigenous children, however little is known about the Indian Indigenous experience. This study examined the impact of residential schooling on Indigenous children's wellbeing and that of their communities, using data from an ethnographic research project in Attapadi, Kerala, including interviews, focus group discussions and participant observation with Indigenous communities. Key outcomes from residential schooling reported by the participants include the fear of losing Indigenous identity, shame of being Indigenous, change in the attitude of young people when they returned from schools, and feelings of confusion and stress that young Indigenous participants felt trying to fit into their communities on their return. Findings suggest that these Indigenous youth felt disconnected from several factors that are known to promote resilience for Indigenous communities including a strong cultural identity, connection to the land and ancestors, thereby making them more vulnerable to poor mental health and negative impacts on their overall wellbeing. Addressing these concerns requires a detailed understanding of the specific factors influencing outcomes for Indigenous youth within the Indian residential schooling system, and designing and implementing data-informed conceptual, structural and policy change including the provision of culturally safe mental health services.

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"我们的孩子怎样才能从我们这里学到我们的生活方式或了解他们是谁呢?寄宿学校及其对南印度阿塔帕迪土著青年福祉的影响。
印度通常使用寄宿学校为土著青年提供教育,这就要求青年长期远离家庭和社区。在国际上,有明确的证据表明寄宿学校对土著儿童的心理健康、社会和社区成果产生了有害影响,但对印度土著的经历却知之甚少。本研究利用喀拉拉邦阿塔帕迪人种学研究项目的数据,包括与土著社区的访谈、焦点小组讨论和参与观察,考察了寄宿学校教育对土著儿童及其社区福祉的影响。参与者报告的寄宿学校教育的主要结果包括对失去土著身份的恐惧、作为土著的羞耻感、年轻人从学校返回后态度的转变,以及年轻的土著参与者在返回后试图融入社区时所感受到的困惑和压力。研究结果表明,这些原住民青年感到与促进原住民社区复原力的几个已知因素脱节,这些因素包括强烈的文化认同、与土地和祖先的联系,从而使他们更容易出现心理健康问题,并对他们的整体福祉产生负面影响。要解决这些问题,就需要详细了解影响印第安寄宿学校系统中土著青少年结果的具体因素,并设计和实施以数据为依据的概念、结构和政策变革,包括提供文化上安全的心理健康服务。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
12.00%
发文量
93
期刊介绍: Transcultural Psychiatry is a fully peer reviewed international journal that publishes original research and review articles on cultural psychiatry and mental health. Cultural psychiatry is concerned with the social and cultural determinants of psychopathology and psychosocial treatments of the range of mental and behavioural problems in individuals, families and human groups. In addition to the clinical research methods of psychiatry, it draws from the disciplines of psychiatric epidemiology, medical anthropology and cross-cultural psychology.
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