Journal Article10.1007/S12571-020-01112-0
Determinants, effects, and coping strategies for low-yield periods of harvest: a qualitative study in two communities in Nunavut, Canada
Sappho Z. Gilbert,Deatra E. Walsh,Samantha N. Levy,Beverly Maksagak,Mona I. Milton,James D. Ford,Nicola L. Hawley,Robert Dubrow +7 more
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the meaning of country food, identify determinants of low-yield periods of countryfood harvest and their effects on community health, and summarize coping strategies and ideas for sustaining food security during these leaner periods.
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Abstract: Food sovereignty among Inuit in Nunavut, Canada has long meant year-round harvest of country (hunted, fished, or gathered) food. In recent decades, climatic and non-climatic challenges have complicated these subsistence activities, threatening food security. We examine the meaning of country food, identify determinants of low-yield periods of country food harvest and their effects on community health, and summarize coping strategies and ideas for sustaining food security during these “leaner” periods. Thirty semi-structured interviews were conducted in July and August of 2018 with elders and/or hunters and trappers in Cambridge Bay and Pond Inlet. We found country food holds diverse meanings in the lives of our participants, including for their diet and nutrition, health, Inuit identity and traditions, practice of harvest and subsistence, and spirituality. Participants reported reduced wildlife populations, environmental or weather issues, changing wildlife migration patterns, and financial or equipment-related constraints as determinants of low-yield periods of harvest. Community health is impacted during lean periods across four interrelated dimensions: “craving” of country food, physical health, mental health, and nutrition. Due to their lifelong reliance on country food, elders were described as being particularly vulnerable and are prioritized within the traditional food sharing system. The most commonly cited coping strategies were turning to intra- or inter-community food sharing networks for country food and purchasing groceries. To support communities during low-yield periods of harvest, participants suggested increased support for Hunters and Trappers Organizations to acquire country food for community distribution, as well as greater financial and equipment support for harvesters.
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Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North: A systematic review to inform clinical practice
Laurence Lebel,Vincent Paquin,Tiff-Annie Kenny,Christopher Fletcher,Lucie Nadeau,Eduardo Chachamovich,Mélanie Lemire +6 more
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Food Security Status of Indigenous Peoples in Canada According to the 4 Pillars of Food Security: A Scoping Review.
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TL;DR: This paper conducted a literature search of the following databases: Ovid Medline, EMBASE, Web of Science (Web of Knowledge), and CINAHL, as well as the Indigenous Studies Portal (up to June 19, 2021) to summarize the published research discussing any of the four pillars of food security among Indigenous peoples in Canada.
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Coping Behaviours and the concept of Time Poverty: a review of perceived social and health outcomes of food insecurity on women and children
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Monitoring the dynamic vulnerability of an Arctic subsistence food system to climate change: The case of Ulukhaktok, NT.
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AMAP 2017. Adaptation Actions for a Changing Arctic: Perspectives from the Baffin Bay/Davis Strait Region
Peter Aastrup,Maria Ackrén,Michel Allard,Philippe Archambault,Kristine Arendt,Carl Barrette,Simon Bélanger,Trevor Bell,Dominique Berteaux,K. Bjella,Lill Rastad Bjørst,David Boertmann,Merete Watt Boolsen,Heather Brooks,Ross Brown,Tanya Brown,Andrée-Sylvie Carbonneau,Diane Chaumont,Tom Christensen,Christine Cuyler,Jackie Dawson,Chris Derksen,Émmanuel Devred,Guy Doré,Sharon Edmunds-potvin,Knud Falk,Steve Ferguson,Kaitlyn Finner,Niels Nielsen Foged,James D. Ford,Alastair Franke,Gilles Gauthier,Patrick Grenier,Emmanuel Guy,James Hamilton,Anne Merrild Hansen,Gwen Healey,Rasmus B. Hedeholm,Chris Hotson,Stephen E. L. Howell,Hayley Hung,Linnea Ingebrigtson,Thomas Ingeman-Nielsen,Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami,Rikke Becker Jacobsen,Thomas James,Margaret Johnston,Berit Kaae,Tove Lading,Melissa Lafrenière,Scott F. Lamoureux,Peter L. Langen,Frédéric Lasserre,Diane Lavoie,David Lee,Mickaël Lemay,Esther Lévesque,Francis Lévesque,Emmanuel L’Hérault,Wendy M. Loya,Sergey Marchenko,Valérie Mathon-Dufour,Hans Meltofte,Flemming Merkel,Anders Mosbech,Gert Mulvad,Josephine Nymand,Darlene O’Leary,Steffen M. Olsen,Jean-François Pelletier,Larissa Pizzolato,Frank Rigét,Mylène Riva,Dominique Robert,Christian B. Rodehacke,Thierry Rodon,Mikael Sejr,Martin Sharp,Malene Simon,Sharon L. Smith,Chris Southcott,Sara Statham,Martin Stendel,Jason Stow,Pelle Tejsner,Clive Tesar,Rasmus T. Tonboe,Jean-Éric Tremblay,Fernando Ugarte,Christina Viskum Lytken Larsen,Fiona Walton,Susse Wegeberg,Hope Weiler,George Wenzel,Laura J. Wheeland +94 more
- 01 Jan 2018
TL;DR: Aastrup et al. as mentioned in this paper presented the Aastrup, Peter, Ackrén, Maria; Allard, Michel; Archambault, Philippe; Arendt, Kristine; Barrette, Carl; Bélanger, Simon; Bell, Trevor; Berteaux, Dominique; Bjorst, Lill Rastad; Boertmann, David; Boolsen, Merete Watt; Brooks, Heather; Brown, Ross, Ross ; Brown, Tanya ; Carbonneau, AndréeSylvie; Chaum
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Food insecurity in Nunavut: Are we going from bad to worse?
TL;DR: Access to adequate food is a major challenge for communities across the Inuit Nunangat and food insecurity has been identified to be at crisis level, with 46.8% of households categorized as food in Nunavut.
Reflections on the intercultural politics of food, diet, and nutrition research in Canadian Inuit communities
Christopher Fletcher
- 14 Jun 2017
TL;DR: This essay explores the intercultural dynamics of food and health research in Inuit communities over time through multiple sources of information used to explore Inuit subjectivity in research through different ways of conceptualizing and acting on food-related practice and knowledge.
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Elizabeth Worden,Tristan Pearce,Michelle Gruben,Dorothy Ross,Clarence Kowana,Lisa L. Loseto +5 more
- 13 Jul 2020
TL;DR: In the western Canadian Arctic, Inuvialuit harvest a beluga whale (Delphinapterus leu... as mentioned in this paper, which has strong economic, dietary, and cultural importance.