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Journal of aboriginal health最新文献

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Beginning with Our Voices: How the Experiential Stories of First Nations Women Contribute to a National Research Project. 从我们的声音开始:第一民族妇女的经验故事如何为国家研究项目做出贡献。
Pub Date : 2009-12-01 DOI: 10.3138/IJIH.V4I2.28971
S. Acoose, Debbie Blunderfield, C. Dell, Valerie Desjarlais
The purpose of this paper is to review how the experiential stories of First Nations women contribute to a national research project. The project focuses on how women's healing is impacted by their views about themselves as - and the stigma associated with being - a drug user, involved in crime and an Aboriginal woman. Our project began with three First Nations women on our research team documenting the role of stigma and self-identity in their personal healing journeys from problematically using drugs and being in conflict with the law. In this paper we discuss how key components of feminist research practices, Aboriginal methodology and community-based research helped us position the women's experiential stories in authoritative, recognized and celebrated ways in our study. We illustrate how the women's stories uniquely contributed to the creation of our interview questions and the research project in general. We also discuss how the women personally benefited from writing about and sharing their experiences. Key benefits include the women discovering the impact of the written word, promotion of their healing, personal recognition of their ability to offer hope to women in need, increased self-esteem, and increased appreciation of the importance of sharing their lived experiences with others. Our method of research differs from a conventional western scientific approach to understanding, and as such made important contributions to both the project itself and the women who shared their experiential stories.
本文的目的是回顾第一民族妇女的经验故事如何为国家研究项目做出贡献。该项目关注的是女性对自己作为吸毒者、犯罪分子和土著妇女的看法以及与之相关的耻辱是如何影响她们的康复的。我们的项目开始于我们的研究团队中的三位第一民族妇女,她们记录了耻辱和自我认同在她们从有问题的吸毒和违反法律的个人康复过程中的作用。在本文中,我们讨论了女权主义研究实践、土著方法论和社区研究的关键组成部分如何帮助我们在研究中以权威、公认和著名的方式定位女性的经验故事。我们说明了这些女性的故事是如何对我们的采访问题和研究项目的创作做出独特贡献的。我们还讨论了这些女性如何从写作和分享她们的经历中获益。主要的好处包括女性发现了文字的影响,促进了她们的康复,个人认识到她们为有需要的女性提供希望的能力,增强了自尊,并增加了与他人分享生活经历的重要性。我们的研究方法不同于传统的西方科学理解方法,因此对项目本身和分享她们经历的女性都做出了重要贡献。
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引用次数: 8
Beginning with Our Voices: How the Experiential Stories of First Nations Women Contribute to a National Research Project. 从我们的声音开始:第一民族妇女的经验故事如何为国家研究项目做出贡献。
Pub Date : 2009-12-01
Sharon Acoose, Debbie Blunderfield, Colleen Anne Dell, Val Desjarlais

The purpose of this paper is to review how the experiential stories of First Nations women contribute to a national research project. The project focuses on how women's healing is impacted by their views about themselves as - and the stigma associated with being - a drug user, involved in crime and an Aboriginal woman. Our project began with three First Nations women on our research team documenting the role of stigma and self-identity in their personal healing journeys from problematically using drugs and being in conflict with the law. In this paper we discuss how key components of feminist research practices, Aboriginal methodology and community-based research helped us position the women's experiential stories in authoritative, recognized and celebrated ways in our study. We illustrate how the women's stories uniquely contributed to the creation of our interview questions and the research project in general. We also discuss how the women personally benefited from writing about and sharing their experiences. Key benefits include the women discovering the impact of the written word, promotion of their healing, personal recognition of their ability to offer hope to women in need, increased self-esteem, and increased appreciation of the importance of sharing their lived experiences with others. Our method of research differs from a conventional western scientific approach to understanding, and as such made important contributions to both the project itself and the women who shared their experiential stories.

本文的目的是回顾第一民族妇女的经验故事如何为国家研究项目做出贡献。该项目关注的是女性对自己作为吸毒者、犯罪分子和土著妇女的看法以及与之相关的耻辱是如何影响她们的康复的。我们的项目开始于我们的研究团队中的三位第一民族妇女,她们记录了耻辱和自我认同在她们从有问题的吸毒和违反法律的个人康复过程中的作用。在本文中,我们讨论了女权主义研究实践、土著方法论和社区研究的关键组成部分如何帮助我们在研究中以权威、公认和著名的方式定位女性的经验故事。我们说明了这些女性的故事是如何对我们的采访问题和研究项目的创作做出独特贡献的。我们还讨论了这些女性如何从写作和分享她们的经历中获益。主要的好处包括女性发现了文字的影响,促进了她们的康复,个人认识到她们为有需要的女性提供希望的能力,增强了自尊,并增加了与他人分享生活经历的重要性。我们的研究方法不同于传统的西方科学理解方法,因此对项目本身和分享她们经历的女性都做出了重要贡献。
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引用次数: 0
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Journal of aboriginal health
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