Water justice & youth mental health resilience: co-creating art-based solutions with Alaskan Native and Awajun communities
水正义
基本信息
- 批准号:AH/X008061/1
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 40.58万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:英国
- 项目类别:Research Grant
- 财政年份:2023
- 资助国家:英国
- 起止时间:2023 至 无数据
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
For Indigenous Peoples, water provides lifeways, subsistence, and has undeniable spiritual significance. Indigenous Peoples are increasingly recognised as global leaders, actively shaping, through their knowledge and wisdom, national and international water policymaking. Yet, for generations, Indigenous Peoples continue to struggle for water justice across the globe, and colonial legacies still have profound effects on Indigenous Peoples' right to self-determination, socioeconomic development, cultural identity and health outcomes. Water connects generations over time and can do so in both healing and destructive ways, depending on how the various generations interact with it. The waters we interact with today have experienced historical traumas, just as Indigenous Peoples. Traditional and contemporary art is increasingly being used by Indigenous Peoples to promote intergenerational healing by reflecting on their connection to land and water through family histories. Indigenous youth are playing a critical role by connecting with Elders and leading a dialogue through art, to inspire change and design solutions to recover from historical trauma to water and to peoples. The goal of our research is to work with Indigenous youth to address current water and mental health issues affecting Indigenous communities. Our approach will be informed by the concept of "two-eyed seeing", blending Indigenous and Non-Indigenous ways of knowing, through a common language: art. We acknowledge that the uneven relationship between non-Indigenous and Indigenous knowledge systems, will require our research team to be careful and consciously aware of their values, positions, and motives.We will work with Awajun and Alaskan Native Peoples in Amazonas (Peru) and Alaska (USA) respectively, where members of the project team have long-term established collaborations and trusted relationships with local organisations and communities. The early stages of our project will aim to consolidate a cross-country Indigenous and non-Indigenous partnership, based on mutual trust and understanding. Within the research team and with the communities we will develop a common vision of the collaborative process to support the creation of: (i) a shared understanding of how to talk together; (ii) a shared vision of how to walk together; and (iii) a shared understanding of terms and concepts.Blending narrative and participatory art approaches, which are consistent with and guided by Awajun and Alaskan Native Indigenous ways of knowing, we will raise consciousness for social change, and open new pathways to knowledge development, which shift the power towards Indigenous Peoples and communities. Through artistic caravans, traditional art workshops, an arts-based social enterprise and photovoice, we will explore the linkages between mental health and water and the challenges of equity and justice in water governance in Indigenous communities. The final stages of our project focus on developing a network to connect Indigenous youth, researchers, artists, activists and policy makers from around the world who share a commitment to arts-based research and intercultural knowledge exchange. The network will facilitate dialogues through an online discussion platform, podcast series and a travelling exhibition. This study will demonstrate that Indigenous youth are experts on their lands and that they are able to make decisions to inform a future that is compatible with their own goals, ways of knowing and of being. By combining diverse research expertise with Indigenous knowledge and interests, and by building an arts-based understanding of how to harness Indigenous principles in support of water and human health, this project has the potential to inform sustainable strategies using approaches which may be replicated in other regions of the world.
对土著人民来说,水提供了生活方式和生存条件,并具有不可否认的精神意义。原住民越来越被视为全球领导者,他们通过自己的知识和智慧积极影响国家和国际水政策制定。然而,几代人以来,土著人民继续在地球仪各地为水正义而斗争,殖民遗产仍然对土著人民的自决权、社会经济发展、文化特性和健康成果产生深远影响。随着时间的推移,水将几代人联系在一起,并且可以以愈合和破坏的方式这样做,这取决于各代人如何与它互动。我们今天与之互动的沃茨经历了历史创伤,就像土著人民一样。土著人民越来越多地利用传统和当代艺术,通过家庭历史反思他们与土地和水的联系,促进代际愈合。土著青年正在发挥关键作用,他们与长者建立联系,并通过艺术引导对话,以激发变革和设计解决方案,从水和人民的历史创伤中恢复过来。我们研究的目标是与土著青年合作,解决目前影响土著社区的水和心理健康问题。我们的方法将以“两眼看”的概念为基础,通过一种共同的语言,融合土著和非土著的认识方式:我们承认,非土著和土著知识体系之间的不平衡关系,将要求我们的研究团队谨慎和自觉地意识到他们的价值观,立场,我们将分别与亚马逊(秘鲁)和阿拉斯加(美国)的阿瓦军和阿拉斯加原住民合作,项目团队成员与当地组织和社区建立了长期的合作关系和信任关系。我们项目的早期阶段旨在巩固基于相互信任和理解的跨国土著和非土著伙伴关系。在研究团队和社区内,我们将制定一个共同的愿景,合作过程中,以支持创建:(一)如何一起交谈的共同理解;(二)如何一起走的共同愿景;以及(iii)对术语和概念的共同理解。融合叙事和参与性艺术方法,这是符合和Awajun和阿拉斯加原住民的认知方式的指导下,我们将提高社会变革的意识,并开辟知识发展的新途径,将权力转移到原住民和社区。通过艺术大篷车,传统艺术研讨会,以艺术为基础的社会企业和photovoice,我们将探讨心理健康和水之间的联系,以及土著社区水治理中的公平和正义挑战。我们项目的最后阶段侧重于建立一个网络,将来自世界各地的土著青年,研究人员,艺术家,活动家和政策制定者联系起来,他们共同致力于以艺术为基础的研究和跨文化知识交流。该网络将通过在线讨论平台、播客系列和巡回展览促进对话。这项研究将表明,土著青年是他们土地上的专家,他们能够做出决定,为未来提供信息,这与他们自己的目标、认识方式和存在方式是一致的。通过将不同的研究专业知识与土著知识和兴趣相结合,并通过建立对如何利用土著原则支持水和人类健康的基于艺术的理解,该项目有可能使用可在世界其他地区复制的方法为可持续战略提供信息。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
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会议论文数量(0)
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Pamela Katic其他文献
Abstracts of papers presented at the Annual Meeting
年会论文摘要
- DOI:
10.1017/s002205070004119x - 发表时间:
1995 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Alison L. Booth;Pamela Katic - 通讯作者:
Pamela Katic
Rethinking responses to the world’s water crises
重新思考对全球水危机的应对措施
- DOI:
10.1038/s41893-024-01470-z - 发表时间:
2024-12-09 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:27.100
- 作者:
R. Quentin Grafton;Safa Fanaian;James Horne;Pamela Katic;Nhat-Mai Nguyen;Claudia Ringler;Libby Robin;Julia Talbot-Jones;Sarah Ann Wheeler;Paul Robert Wyrwoll;Fabiola Avarado;Asit K. Biswas;Edoardo Borgomeo;Roy Brouwer;Peter Coombes;Robert Costanza;Robert Hope;Tom Kompas;Ida Kubiszewski;Ana Manero;Rita Martins;Rachael McDonnell;William Nikolakis;Russell Rollason;Nadeem Samnakay;Bridget R. Scanlon;Jesper Svensson;Djiby Thiam;Cecilia Tortajada;Yahua Wang;John Williams - 通讯作者:
John Williams
Estimating the Wage Elasticity of Labour Supply to a Firm: What Evidence is There for Monopsony?
估计公司劳动力供应的工资弹性:垄断有什么证据?
- DOI:
10.1111/j.1475-4932.2011.00728.x - 发表时间:
2010 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Alison L. Booth;Pamela Katic - 通讯作者:
Pamela Katic
Targeting investments in small-scale groundwater irrigation using Bayesian networks for a data-scarce river basin in Sub-Saharan Africa
- DOI:
10.1016/j.envsoft.2016.04.004 - 发表时间:
2016-08-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Pamela Katic;Joanne Morris - 通讯作者:
Joanne Morris
Pamela Katic的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Pamela Katic', 18)}}的其他基金
Synthesis and critical assessment of management tools to mainstream biodiversity in decision-making in the private sector
管理工具的综合和严格评估,以将生物多样性纳入私营部门决策的主流
- 批准号:
NE/W007436/1 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 40.58万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
Diverseafood: Evaluating the potential of multitrophic aquaculture to improve nutrition and ecosystem sustainability in the UK
Diverseafood:评估多营养水产养殖改善英国营养和生态系统可持续性的潜力
- 批准号:
BB/S014241/1 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 40.58万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
Intercultural models to improve nutrition and health of indigenous populations through gender-sensitive agroforestry practices in Peru
秘鲁通过性别敏感农林业实践改善土著居民营养和健康的跨文化模式
- 批准号:
MR/S024727/1 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 40.58万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
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