TY - JOUR
T1 - Promoting wellness in Alaskan villages
T2 - Integrating traditional knowledge and science of wild berries
AU - Flint, Courtney G.
AU - Robinson, Ewan S.
AU - Kellogg, Joshua
AU - Ferguson, Gary
AU - BouFajreldin, Lama
AU - Dolan, Mallory
AU - Raskin, Ilya
AU - Lila, Mary Ann
N1 - Funding Information:
This project was well received and supported by local leaders eager for community-based research and providing opportunities for youth. Community members often mentioned that project support was high because we involved youth in science as well as traditional knowledge. In interviews, though one or two individuals from each community indicated skepticism about science based on past negative experience with researchers, the majority of participants were either ambivalent or curious about science. The following sections highlight findings regarding perceptions and measurements of berries and health, observations of environmental change, and perceptions of environmental and community wellness.
PY - 2011/6
Y1 - 2011/6
N2 - People draw upon multiple forms of environmental knowledge, from scientific to highly contextual local or traditional forms of knowledge, to interpret problems and gauge risks in complex socio-ecological systems. In collaboration with three remote Alaska Native communities, and using an interdisciplinary, participatory, and mixed methods research approach, we explored traditional ecological knowledge and scientific aspects of wild berries and the broader context of community health and environmental change. Combining site visits, key informant interviews, focus groups, survey questionnaires, portable field bioassays, and laboratory follow-up analyses, our research revealed the importance of local subsistence resources for community wellness. Multiple berry species were found to have powerful bioactive health properties for ameliorating metabolic syndrome as well as importance for community wellness. Communities differed in the degree to which they characterized berries as healthy foods and perceived environmental risks including climate change. Findings suggest the importance of incorporating locally available foods and socio-cultural traditions into community wellness programming. This article also discusses challenges and opportunities associated with transdisciplinary, participatory research with indigenous communities.
AB - People draw upon multiple forms of environmental knowledge, from scientific to highly contextual local or traditional forms of knowledge, to interpret problems and gauge risks in complex socio-ecological systems. In collaboration with three remote Alaska Native communities, and using an interdisciplinary, participatory, and mixed methods research approach, we explored traditional ecological knowledge and scientific aspects of wild berries and the broader context of community health and environmental change. Combining site visits, key informant interviews, focus groups, survey questionnaires, portable field bioassays, and laboratory follow-up analyses, our research revealed the importance of local subsistence resources for community wellness. Multiple berry species were found to have powerful bioactive health properties for ameliorating metabolic syndrome as well as importance for community wellness. Communities differed in the degree to which they characterized berries as healthy foods and perceived environmental risks including climate change. Findings suggest the importance of incorporating locally available foods and socio-cultural traditions into community wellness programming. This article also discusses challenges and opportunities associated with transdisciplinary, participatory research with indigenous communities.
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U2 - 10.1007/s10393-011-0707-9
DO - 10.1007/s10393-011-0707-9
M3 - Review article
C2 - 21915737
AN - SCOPUS:84860214102
SN - 1612-9202
VL - 8
SP - 199
EP - 209
JO - EcoHealth
JF - EcoHealth
IS - 2
ER -