4.5 Article

Role of social, cultural and symbolic capital for youth and community wellbeing in a rural Alaska Native community

Journal

CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW
Volume 137, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2022.106459

Keywords

Alaska Native youth; Social capital; Cultural capital; Symbolic capital; Wellbeing; Digital storytelling

Funding

  1. National Institute Of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [UL1GM118991, TL4GM118992, RL5GM118990, P30GM103325, U54GM115371, U54GM104944]
  2. University of Alaska

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Promoting health among Indigenous Peoples through strength-based approaches rooted in their cultures helps counteract the negative effects of rapid social changes. Understanding the perspectives and experiences of youth and adults is crucial in assessing the impacts of health promotion programs in Indigenous communities.
Health promotion programs by and for Indigenous Peoples increasingly use strength-based Indigenous approaches aimed at reinforcing protective factors rooted in their cultures and traditions. These protective factors can counteract the deleterious effects induced by the rapid social changes related to colonization. Western social scientists defined cultural, social and symbolic capital as assets akin to social strengths that can promote health. It is important to understand Indigenous perspectives on these social and cultural capitals, and the ways their interplay can promote wellness. Using the qualitative methods photovoice and digital storytelling, we elicited the perspectives of Athabascan middle and high school students participating in the Frank Attla Youth and Sled Dog Care-Mushing Program in their home community of Huslia in Interior Alaska. Subsequently, we disseminated the stories and preliminary findings in Huslia, and conducted focus groups with adults to triangulate with the youth perspectives. Deductive and inductive thematic content analysis of youth stories and photos revealed the impacts of the program on them and their community. Youth reported gains in cultural, social and symbolic capital and shared what these forms of capital mean in their cultural context. Cultural capital gains were mostly in its embodied form, e.g. in work ethics, perseverance and the value of cultural traditions; social capital gains revolved around relations with peers, adults and Elders, nature and animals, as well as social cohesion and sense of belonging in Huslia; Symbolic capital was reflected through pride and spirituality. The students' stories also illustrated their perspectives on how the program affected their wellbeing, through physical activity, healing relations with dogs, increased self-esteem and visions of a bright future. Adults corroborated youth perspectives and shared their observations of program impacts on discipline, academic and life skills and resilience. These findings could be used to guide development and assessment of culturally-based wellbeing promoting interventions.

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