TY - JOUR
T1 - Supporting Traditional Foodways Knowledge and Practices in Alaska Native Communities
T2 - The Elders Mentoring Elders Camp
AU - Demientieff, La Verne Xilegg
AU - Rasmus, Stacy
AU - Black, Jessica C.
AU - Presley, Jessica
AU - Jauregui-Dusseau, Alex
AU - Clyma, Kaylee R.
AU - Jernigan, Valarie Blue Bird
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Society for Public Health Education.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - The transmission of generational knowledge in Alaska Native communities has been disrupted by colonization and led to declining health among Alaska Natives, as evidenced by the loss of knowledge regarding traditional foods and foodways and increasing rates of cardiometabolic disorders impacting Alaska Natives. Elders play a central role in passing down this generational knowledge, but emerging Elders may have difficulty in stepping into their roles as Elders due to the rapid social and cultural changes impacting their communities. The Center for Alaska Native Health Research (CANHR) and the Denakkanaaga Elders Program are partnering with the Center for Indigenous Innovation and Health Equity to uplift and support traditional food knowledge and practices to promote health in Alaska Native communities. Guided by a decolonizing and Indigenizing framework, researchers at CANHR are working with Athabascan Elders in the Interior of Alaska to strengthen and protect the intergenerational transmission of cultural knowledge and practices for emerging Elders. This community-academic partnership will implement and evaluate an Elders Mentoring Elders Camp to focus on repairing and nurturing relationships through the practice and preservation of cultural knowledge and practices, including traditional foodways. This initiative contributes to the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, which is necessary to keep culture alive and thriving.
AB - The transmission of generational knowledge in Alaska Native communities has been disrupted by colonization and led to declining health among Alaska Natives, as evidenced by the loss of knowledge regarding traditional foods and foodways and increasing rates of cardiometabolic disorders impacting Alaska Natives. Elders play a central role in passing down this generational knowledge, but emerging Elders may have difficulty in stepping into their roles as Elders due to the rapid social and cultural changes impacting their communities. The Center for Alaska Native Health Research (CANHR) and the Denakkanaaga Elders Program are partnering with the Center for Indigenous Innovation and Health Equity to uplift and support traditional food knowledge and practices to promote health in Alaska Native communities. Guided by a decolonizing and Indigenizing framework, researchers at CANHR are working with Athabascan Elders in the Interior of Alaska to strengthen and protect the intergenerational transmission of cultural knowledge and practices for emerging Elders. This community-academic partnership will implement and evaluate an Elders Mentoring Elders Camp to focus on repairing and nurturing relationships through the practice and preservation of cultural knowledge and practices, including traditional foodways. This initiative contributes to the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, which is necessary to keep culture alive and thriving.
KW - Alaska Native
KW - chronic disease
KW - community-academic partnership
KW - decolonization
KW - food security
KW - health equity
KW - indigenous
KW - indigenous communities
KW - indigenous food sovereignty
KW - indigenous knowledge
KW - Native American
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85175058920&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/15248399231190365
DO - 10.1177/15248399231190365
M3 - Article
C2 - 37877641
AN - SCOPUS:85175058920
SN - 1524-8399
VL - 24
SP - 1101
EP - 1104
JO - Health Promotion Practice
JF - Health Promotion Practice
IS - 6
ER -