4.0 Article

Youth-Led Participatory Video as a Strategy to Enhance Inuit Youth Adaptive Capacities for Dealing with Climate Change

Journal

ARCTIC
Volume 68, Issue 4, Pages 486-499

Publisher

ARCTIC INST N AMER
DOI: 10.14430/arctic4527

Keywords

participatory video; protective factors; resilience; adaptive capacity; climate change adaptation; youth; Inuit; Nunatsiavut; Arctic; Canada

Funding

  1. Nunatsiavut Department of Health and Social Development
  2. Native Spirit Youth Centre in Rigolet
  3. Air Labrador
  4. First Air
  5. Inuit Traditional Knowledge for Adapting to the Health Effects of Climate Change project (IK-ADAPT)
  6. Inuit Mental Health Adaptation to Climate Change project (IMHACC)
  7. Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change project (IHACC)
  8. Health Canada's First Nations
  9. Inuit Health Branch
  10. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)
  11. ArcticNet
  12. CIHR Applied Public Health Chair
  13. Nasivvik Centre for Inuit Health and Changing Environments
  14. Royal Canadian Geographic Society

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Rapid climatic and environmental changes experienced throughout the Canadian North are having significant impacts on the lives of Inuit, with implications for the future of the large Inuit youth population. Within the adaptation research and practitioner community, youth voices, perspectives, and involvement are essential in ensuring representative and sustainable adaptation strategies. This paper examines the potential of youth-led participatory video (PV) as a strategy to foster known protective factors that underpin the resilience of youth and their capacity to adapt to various stresses, including impacts of climate change. The work draws on a case study from the Inuit community of Rigolet, Nunatsiavut, Labrador, Canada, where a two-week PV workshop was conducted with seven youth and followed by in-depth interviews with participants and community members. The findings show that PV may be a pathway to greater adaptive capacities because the process connects to known protective factors that enhance resilience of circumpolar indigenous youth. PV also shows promise as a strategy to engage youth in sharing insights and knowledge, connect generations, and involve young Inuit in planning and decision making in general.

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