Intersectionality of Resilience: A Strengths-Based Case Study Approach With Indigenous Youth in an Urban Canadian Context.

Qualitative Health Research
Chinyere NjezeAndrew R Hatala

Abstract

By bringing together two important areas of contemporary health research-resilience among Indigenous youth and intersectionality theory-this study advances an intersectionality of resilience framework that exposes intersecting forms of oppression within inner city urban contexts, while also critically reframing intersectionality to include strength-based perspectives of overlapping individual, social, and structural resilience-promoting processes. Drawing on Indigenous methodologies, a "two-eyed seeing" approach, and Stake's case study methodology involving multiple data sources (i.e., four sharing circles, 38 conversational interviews, four rounds of photovoice, and naturalistic interactions that occurred with 28 youth over an entire year), this qualitative study outlines three intersecting processes that facilitate youth resilience and wellness in various ways: (a) strengthening cultural identity and family connections; (b) engagement in social groups and service to self and community; and (c) practices of the arts and a positive outlook. In the end, implications for research, clinical practice, and health or community interventions are also discussed.

References

Apr 11, 2008·The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine : Research on Paradigm, Practice, and Policy·Alex Hankey
Feb 22, 2011·Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. Revue Canadienne De Psychiatrie·Laurence J KirmayerKarla Jessen Williamson

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Citations

Jul 12, 2021·Lancet·Yudit Namer, Oliver Razum

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
environmental stress

Software Mentioned

Dedoose

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