Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) K. Hopper , L. Wexler , Linda Joule , Joe Garoutte , Janet Mazziotti
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Columbia University Irving Medical Center, University of Massachusetts Amherst
ANO 2014
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Transcultural Psychiatry
ISSN 1363-4615
E-ISSN 1461-7471
EDITORA Annual Reviews (United States)
DOI 10.1177/1363461513495085
CITAÇÕES 9
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 07bedc344085098c89dcd08798d5917a

Resumo

Indigenous circumpolar youth are experiencing challenges of growing up in a context much different from that of their parents and their grandparents due to rapid and imposed social change. Our study is interested in community resilience: the meaning systems, resources, and relationships that structure how youth go about overcoming difficulties. The research reflects an understanding that social and cultural ecologies influence people's available and meaningful options. The in-depth, qualitative study of 20 youth from the same Arctic community shows Inupiat (Alaska Native) youth are navigating challenges. Findings from this research suggest that Inupiat youth reflect more flexible patterns of resilience when they are culturally grounded. This cultural foundation involves kinship networks that mediate young people's access to cultural and material assets. Our participants emphasized the importance of taking care of others and 'giving back to the community.' Being 'in the country' linked youth to traditional ontology that profoundly shifted how youth felt in relation to themselves, to others, and the world. The vast majority of participants' 'fulfillment narratives' centered on doing subsistence and/or cultural activities. In relation to this, young people were more likely to demonstrate versatility in their resilience strategies when deploying coherent self-narratives that reflected novel yet culturally resonant styles. Young women were more likely to demonstrate this by reconfiguring notions of culture and gender identity in ways that helped them meet challenges in their lives. Lastly, generational differences in understandings signal particular ways that young people's historical and political positioning influences their access to cultural resources.

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