“We Live in a Very Toxic World”: Changing Environmental Landscapes and Indigenous Food Sovereignty

IF 1.4 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE Studies in Social Justice Pub Date : 2022-11-07 DOI:10.26522/ssj.v16i3.2746
J. Liddell, S. Kington, C. McKinley
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

The purpose of this article is to understand how historical oppression has undermined health through environmental injustices that have given rise to food insecurity. Specifically, the article examines ways in which settler colonialism has transformed and contaminated the land itself, impacting the availability and quality of food and the overall health of Indigenous peoples. Food security and environmental justice for Gulf Coast, state-recognized tribes has been infrequently explored. These tribes lack federal recognition and have limited access to recourse and supplemental resources as a result. This research fills an important gap in the literature through exploring the intersection of environmental justice and food insecurity issues for this population. Partnering with a community-advisory board and using a qualitative descriptive methodology, 31 Gulf Coast Indigenous women participated in semi-structured interviews about their healthcare experiences and concerns. Through these interviews, participants expressed concerns about (a) the environmental impacts of pollution on the contamination of food and on the health of tribal members; and (b) the impact of these changes on the land, such as negatively impacting gardening practices. The authors of this study document how environmental changes have compounded these concerns and contribute to the overall pollution of food and water sources and unviability of subsistence practices, severely effecting tribal members’ health. In conclusion, we show how social and environmental justice issues such as pollution, industry exploitation, and climate change perpetuate the goals of settler colonialism through undermining cultural practices and the overall health of Indigenous peoples.
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“我们生活在一个非常有毒的世界”:不断变化的环境景观和土著粮食主权
这篇文章的目的是了解历史压迫是如何通过导致粮食不安全的环境不公正破坏健康的。具体而言,这篇文章探讨了定居者殖民主义如何改变和污染土地本身,影响粮食的供应和质量以及土著人民的整体健康。墨西哥湾沿岸国家承认的部落的粮食安全和环境正义很少被探索。这些部落缺乏联邦政府的承认,因此获得追索权和补充资源的机会有限。这项研究通过探索这一人群的环境正义和粮食不安全问题的交叉点,填补了文献中的一个重要空白。31名墨西哥湾沿岸土著妇女与社区咨询委员会合作,采用定性描述方法,参加了关于她们的医疗保健经历和关切的半结构化访谈。通过这些访谈,与会者对以下问题表示关切:(a)污染对食品污染和部落成员健康的环境影响;以及(b)这些变化对土地的影响,例如对园艺实践的负面影响。这项研究的作者记录了环境变化如何加剧了这些担忧,并导致食物和水源的整体污染和生存方式的不可行性,严重影响了部落成员的健康。最后,我们展示了污染、工业剥削和气候变化等社会和环境正义问题如何通过破坏文化习俗和土著人民的整体健康,使定居者殖民主义的目标长期存在。
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来源期刊
Studies in Social Justice
Studies in Social Justice POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
10.00%
发文量
49
审稿时长
10 weeks
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