Abstract

In 2020, global injustice has taken center stage during the uprising of the Black Lives Matter movement and other social movements. Activists are calling attention to longstanding disparities in health outcomes and an urgent need for justice. Given the global socio-political moment, how can health researchers draw on current critical theory and social movements to create structures for equitable outcomes in health research and practice? Here, we demonstrate principles for effective health research and social justice work that builds on community-engaged approaches by weaving critical Indigenous approaches into structural project designs. Our project, “Health Resilience among American Indians in Arizona”, brought new and seasoned researchers together to collect and analyze data on the knowledge of healthcare providers concerning American Indian health and well-being. Four years after the conclusion of the project, the team developed and created a post-project self-assessment to investigate lasting impacts of project participation. In this communication, we discuss the principles of defining and measuring the capacity to build together. This work responds to the call from Indigenous scholars and community leaders to build an internal narrative of change. While we will not present the full instrument, we will discuss building a strong foundation using the principles of engagement for planning and implementing justice and change.

Highlights

  • The complexity of global and local crises is immense

  • The 2020 uprising of social movements like Black Lives Matter, which began after Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd, brings to light many years of longstanding inequalities in life and health

  • It would enable groups to adjust structures to meet the needs of different and overlapping communities participating in research and practice and help to integrate a framework into practice to erode an assumed barrier between a community of need and others

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Summary

Introduction

The complexity of global and local crises is immense. There is not a single solution that can solve urgent, health-related problems. The 2020 uprising of social movements like Black Lives Matter, which began after Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd, brings to light many years of longstanding inequalities in life and health. Indigenous peoples have faced health disparities and threats to their well-being and life at higher rates than their nonindigenous counterparts. The relationships between social justice and health are not new for people who live with these threats, nor are relationships that have been unexplored by social scientists and public health researchers. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 5148; doi:10.3390/ijerph17145148 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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