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Indigenous Health and Justice: Indigenous Justice

Editat de Karen Jarratt-Snider, Marianne O. Nielsen
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 3 iun 2024
Colonial oppression, systemic racism, discrimination, and poor access to a wide range of resources detract from Indigenous health and contribute to continuing health inequities and injustices. These factors have led to structural inadequacies that contribute to circular challenges such as chronic underfunding, understaffing, and culturally insensitive health-care provision. Nevertheless, Indigenous Peoples are working actively to end such legacies.

In Indigenous Health and Justice contributors demonstrate how Indigenous Peoples, individuals, and communities create their own solutions. Chapters focus on both the challenges created by the legacy of settler colonialism and the solutions, strengths, and resilience of Indigenous Peoples and communities in responding to these challenges. It introduces a range of examples, such as the ways in which communities use traditional knowledge and foodways to address health disparities.

Indigenous Health and Justice is the fifth volume in the Indigenous Justice series. The series editors have focused on different aspects of the many kinds of justice that affect Indigenous Peoples. This volume is for students, scholars, activists, policymakers, and health-care professionals interested in health and well-being.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780816553167
ISBN-10: 0816553165
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: 5 b&w illustrations, 4 tables
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: University of Arizona Press
Colecția University of Arizona Press
Seria Indigenous Justice


Notă biografică

Karen Jarratt-Snider (Chocktaw descent) is a professor in the Department of Applied Indigenous Studies at Northern Arizona University.

Marianne O. Nielsen is a professor emerita in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Northern Arizona University.

Recenzii

“To stay alive in modern America, most Indigenous people depend on Western medicine. This book reveals the truth and describes the survivance of Native people during the Covid years while telling us about the early problematic history of government Indian health care.”—Donald L. Fixico, author of The Urban Indian Experience in America

 

Descriere

Indigenous communities are practicing de facto sovereignty to resolve public health issues that are a consequence of settler colonialism. This work delves into health and justice through a range of topics and examples and demonstrates the resilience of Indigenous communities.