Full bibliography
Indigenous Youth and Resilience in Canada and the USA: a Scoping Review
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Heid, Olivia (Author)
- Khalid, Marria (Author)
- Smith, Hailey (Author)
- Kim, Katherine (Author)
- Smith, Savannah (Author)
- Wekerle, Christine (Author)
- Bomberry, Tristan (Author)
- Hill, Lori Davis (Author)
- General, Daogyehneh Amy (Author)
- Green, Tehota’kerá:tonh Jeremy (Author)
- Harris, Chase (Author)
- Jacobs, Beverly (Author)
- Jacobs, Norma (Author)
- Kim, Katherine (Author)
- Horse, Makasa Looking (Author)
- Martin-Hill, Dawn (Author)
- McQueen, Kahontiyoha Cynthia Denise (Author)
- Miller, Tehahenteh Frank (Author)
- Noronha, Noella (Author)
- Smith, Savanah (Author)
- Thomasen, Kristen (Author)
- Wekerle, Christine (Author)
- The Six Nations Youth Mental Wellness Committee (Author)
Title
Indigenous Youth and Resilience in Canada and the USA: a Scoping Review
Abstract
Relative to non-Indigenous youth, Indigenous youth have been under-represented when studying pathways to mental wellness. Yet, a broad range of adversity is acknowledged, from intergenerational and ongoing trauma arising from colonial policies. This scoping review explores resilience definitions, measures, key stressors, and what Indigenous youth identify as pathways to their wellness, based on quantitative and qualitative peer-reviewed literature in Canada and the Continental United States. Eight databases (EBSCO, PsycINFO, Science Direct, Social Science Citation Index, Web of Science, PsycARTICLES, and EMBASE) and hand searches of 7 relevant journals were conducted to ensure literature coverage. Two independent reviewers screened each article, with one Indigenous screener per article. The final scoping review analysis included 44 articles. In articles, no Indigenous term for resilience was found, but related concepts were identified (“walking a good path,” “good mind,” Grandfathers’ teachings on 7 values, decision-making for 7 generations into the future, etc.). Few Indigenous-specific measures of resilience exist, with studies relying on Western measures of psychological resilience. Qualitative approaches supporting youth-led resilience definitions yielded important insights. Youth stressors included the following: substance use, family instability, and loss of cultural identity. Youth resilience strategies included the following: having a future orientation, cultural pride, learning from the natural world, and interacting with community members (e.g., relationship with Elders, being in community and on the land). Indigenous traditional knowledge and cultural continuity serve as prominent pathways to Indigenous youth resilience. More research is needed to yield a holistic, youth-centered measure of resilience that includes traditional practices.
Publication
Adversity and Resilience Science
Volume
3
Issue
2
Pages
113-147
Date
2022-06-01
Journal Abbr
ADV RES SCI
Language
en
ISSN
2662-2416
Short Title
Indigenous Youth and Resilience in Canada and the USA
Accessed
7/24/25, 3:09 PM
Library Catalog
Springer Link
Citation
Heid, O., Khalid, M., Smith, H., Kim, K., Smith, S., Wekerle, C., Bomberry, T., Hill, L. D., General, D. A., Green, T. J., Harris, C., Jacobs, B., Jacobs, N., Kim, K., Horse, M. L., Martin-Hill, D., McQueen, K. C. D., Miller, T. F., Noronha, N., … The Six Nations Youth Mental Wellness Committee. (2022). Indigenous Youth and Resilience in Canada and the USA: a Scoping Review. Adversity and Resilience Science, 3(2), 113–147. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42844-022-00060-2
Author / Editor
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