将美国印第安人和第一民族青年之间基于地点和自然的传统和精神实践联系起来

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health & Place Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-08 DOI:10.1016/j.healthplace.2025.103424
Russette Helen , Handeland Tina , Price Faith , Warne Don , Kelliher Allison , Holden Zack , Landguth Erin , Walls Melissa , Sittner Kelley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

了解地方在土著青年参与以自然为基础的传统和精神活动(NBTSA)方面的作用是一个主要问题,因为接触自然和文化共同有助于整体健康和福祉。从印度历史上的压迫性政策,到气候变化和科技使用增加带来的当代障碍,土著青年继续面临与自然分离和失去部分文化身份的风险。预测土著青年参与NBTSA的地方定性和定量特征尚未得到很好的理解,这些特征可能提供将青年与土地、水及其文化联系起来的关键见解。此外,土著传统生态知识(ITEK)理论模型在社会科学中的应用在很大程度上是缺失的。在这项研究中,我们试图调查居住在主权部落或第一民族的地方(定性)和增加的绿色空间(定量)暴露对土著青年参与nbtsa的作用。我们的研究结果表明,尽管增加居住在绿色空间的暴露具有正相关,但居住在部落国家是NBTSA参与的一个更强的预测因子。将土著方法应用于土著人口和社区的研究,使我们能够超越促进人与自然互动的一般概念(例如,绿色空间),而是确定基于地点的决定因素。也就是说,ITEK框架指导了我们将部落国家纳入研究的基本原理。主权国家通过故事和体验式学习,将青年与传统知识持有者联系起来,分享土著知识和土地和水的实践。意义本研究是第一个测量地方的定性和定量特征的研究之一,这些特征影响了集体认同为土著的青年之间的人与自然互动。我们的研究发现,居住在一个主权部落国家是一个更强的预测因素,而不是增加接触绿色空间,参与基于土地和水的传统和精神实践,为土著健康和福祉的决定因素提供证据和公共卫生影响。
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Connecting place and nature-based traditional and spiritual practices among American Indian and First Nation youth
Understanding the role of place in connection to Indigenous youth participation in nature-based traditional and spiritual activities (NBTSA) is of primary concern as exposure to both nature and culture collectively contribute to overall health and wellbeing. From oppressive historical Indian policies to contemporary barriers by way of climate change and increased use of technology, Indigenous youth continue to face risk of detaching from nature and losing pieces of their cultural identity. Qualitative and quantitative features of place in predicting NBTSA participation among Indigenous youth are not well understood and may offer key insights that connect youth to land, water and their cultures. Moreover, application of the Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge (ITEK) theoretical model to inform the social sciences has largely been absent. In this study, we sought to investigate the role of place measured by residing in a sovereign Tribal or First Nation (qualitative) and increased presence of greenspace (quantitative) exposure on participation in NBTSAs among Indigenous youth. Our findings demonstrate that although increasing residential exposure to greenspace had a positive association, residing in a Tribal Nation was a stronger predictor for NBTSA participation. Applying an Indigenous methodology to research with Indigenous populations and communities allows us to move beyond general notions of what (e.g., greenspace) promotes human-nature interaction and, instead, identify place-based determinants. Namely, the ITEK framework guided our rationale to include Tribal Nations in our study. Sovereign Nations connect youth to traditional knowledge holders that share Indigenous knowledges and practices of the land and water through story and experiential learning.
Significance.
This study is one of the first to measure both qualitative and quantitative features of place that influence human-nature interaction among youth that collectively identify as Indigenous. Our research found that residing in a sovereign Tribal Nation is a stronger predictor than increasing exposure to greenspace for participating in land- and water-based traditional and spiritual practices providing evidence and public health implications for Indigenous determinants to health and wellbeing.
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来源期刊
Health & Place
Health & Place PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
6.20%
发文量
176
审稿时长
29 days
期刊介绍: he journal is an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to the study of all aspects of health and health care in which place or location matters.
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