Indigenous Populations
INDIGENOUS POPULATIONS
In considering indigenous, or aboriginal, populations the terms "indigenous" and "aboriginal" must be framed within a larger context of human adaptation, migration, and colonization. Despite controversy over human origins, many paleoanthropologists uphold the "Out of Africa hypothesis," which states that contemporary humans are descendants from a single line of Homo sapiens that developed in Southeast Africa between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago. From Africa human populations migrated to many areas of the world, sometimes settling among other hominid groups that had arrived earlier. This migration occurred approximately 40,000 years ago for Northwest Africa; 30,000 years ago for western Europe and Australia; and 20,000 years ago for North America (Foley, 1991). Human populations since these first migrations have been highly mobile and exogamous, thus confounding any simple notion of "original" or "native" inhabitants.
Accepted usage of "indigenous" and "aboriginal" refers to an individual or a people whose ancestors inhabited a region before the arrival of colonists in a period starting close to 1400 c.e., corresponding to the beginnings of European imperialism and colonialism. This definition includes peoples of North America, such as American Indians and Alaska Natives, Canadian Indians (First Nations) and Inuit, and Mexican Indians. It also includes but is not limited to Native Hawaiians, South Pacific Islanders, New Zealand Maoris, Australian Aborigines, peoples of Latin America, and tribal peoples of India. These are broad descriptors, used to simplify communication. It is conceded that the appropriateness of any given term falls to the groups being discussed, and therein lie many group and individual differences.
HEALTH STATUS DISPARITIES
Controversy about origins and nomenclature does not extend to dispute over the health status of indigenous people, now numbering some 300 million worldwide. Indigenous populations, relative to nonindigenous populations as well as other disadvantaged minority groups, have more of just about every category of disease. Disparities in health are widening in many regions. Relative to national population averages, indigenous people die ten to thirty years earlier, have infant mortality rates two to three times greater, and experience significantly greater morbidity and mortality from infectious and noncommunicable diseases. Patterns of health and sickness have shifted in indigenous populations in industrialized countries from acute, infectious disease to that of a chronic and degenerative nature (Young, 1994). A high prevalence of risk factors for disease and a greater rate of development of disease and conditions with a substantial behavioral component (e.g., diabetes, hypertension, and some cancers) need to be framed in the context of social risk conditions that affect the expression of individual-level risk factors.
The health issues confronting indigenous populations did not rise out of an historical vacuum (Campbell, 1989). Under the hegemony of European colonization, indigenous populations underwent rapid environmental changes through which their cultures were diluted by and made dependent on "western" ways of living and external resources incompatible with traditional patterns. Political, economic, and social subjugation, along with warfare and genocide, led to voluntary and involuntary adoption of elements of an external culture. Loss of land and control over living conditions, displacement of political institutions, restricted economic opportunity, weakening of social institutions, suppression of beliefs and spirituality, and breakdown of cultural rules and values resulted in individual and collective loss of identity. Anomie and marginalization led to social pathologies including injuries, suicide, violence (interpersonal and self-inflicted), mental illness, and alcohol and substance abuse. Inasmuch as environmental and behavioral or lifestyle factors are reciprocal in their relations to each other, the health of indigenous populations cannot be understood or targeted for improvement without concomitant attention to social risk conditions.
IMPROVING INDIGENOUS HEALTH
Poverty, limited education, cultural barriers, discrimination, jurisdictional problems, and power imbalances with historic precedents are the basis of the health and social problems facing indigenous people at the start of the twenty-first century. Means for improving indigenous health require the development of personal skills and individual and collective capacities and the strengthening of community action at local and national levels. This means supporting the aspirations of indigenous people for self-determination together with attempts to change behavior at the individual level and by organizational and environmental support for behavioral interventions. Culture is of great importance to such initiatives. Indigenous logics often recognize a reciprocal relationship between the health of individuals and communities. Individual health is perceived as a state in which the entire being—spirit, mind, and body—is in balance, with sickness seen as an outcome of disharmony, lack of holism, or imbalance. Cultural values, beliefs, and attitudes can be drawn upon and used by public health initiatives as powerful influences on health and reciprocal determinants of change in behavior and environment.
Mark Daniel
G. Fletcher Linder
(see also: American Indians and Alaska Natives; Cultural Norms; Ethnicity and Health; Folk Medicine; Minority Rights; Traditional Health Beliefs, Practices )
Bibliography
Campbell, G. R. (1989). "The Changing Dimension of Native American Health Care: A Critical Understanding of Contemporary Native American Health Issues." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 13(3, 4):1–20.
Foley, R. (1991). Another Unique Species: Patterns in Human Evolutionary Ecology. Essex: Longman Scientific and Technical.
Young, T. K. (1994). The Health of Native Americans: Towards a Biocultural Epidemiology. Toronto: Oxford University Press.
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Conch farming Caribbean entrepreneur'S UNDERWATER ADVENTURE
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 1/7/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Islands -- Chuck Hesse doesn't look like a conch farmer. He wears khaki shorts and walks barefoot...he is founder and CEO of the world's first conch farm. The inventory at the Caicos Conch Farm numbers 5 million, and Hesse has become...
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Conch Out Fever; More Than 500 Triathletes-in-Training Meet
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 3/28/1988; ; 700+ words
; ...your training schedules) because the Conch Outs are getting ready to take over the...information I now pass on to you. If you are a Conch Out but missed the meeting, please read...seriously training to participate in the Conch Man Mini-Triathlon on Grand Bahama Island...
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Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 11/10/2003; 679 words
; ...Ridder/Tribune Business News Nov. 10--The conch is finally coming back to the Conch Republic. Mote Marine Laboratories, a research organization based in Sarasota, is opening the new Conch Farm along the Key West Bight today. Though not...
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CONCH MEAT MAY NOT BE PRETTY, BUT IT'S A CARIBBEAN DELICACY.(FLAVOR)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 10/23/1996; ; 617 words
; ...Byline: BETTY DOUGLASS, SPECIAL TO FLAVOR CONCH (pronounced konk), is also known as...and parboiling. On Caribbean islands, conch is served raw with lemon, onion and minced...cocktail or minced and made into chowder. Conch is harvested throughout the year off the...
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Cornucopia for Conch Outs
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 12/19/1988; ; 700+ words
; ...volcanic mountains on its way to San Juan. Conch Outs, I thought, are going to like it...Thomas-are going to be the site of three Conch Out events in 1989 and hopefully into the...will host our events from now until the conch shells come home. And then there are the...
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Key West, Fla., Conch Farm Plays Important Role in Replenishing State's Stock.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 11/8/2003; 700+ words
; ...glowing tanks that make up Key West's new Conch Baby Farm. Tucked behind a seafood restaurant...one of the few places in the world were conch stocks, while depleted, aren't gravely threatened. Conch, the symbol of Key West and favorite fritter...
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Honk If You Like Conch
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 8/8/2001; ; 700+ words
; Conch, the seafood of sunny mananas, has brought...restaurant off Route 236 may drop its popular conch fritters because too many customers taste...bar with plastic leis, and suddenly the conch fritters of vacations past seem hopelessly...
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The status of queen conch, Strombus gigas, research in the Caribbean.
Magazine article from: Marine Fisheries Review; 6/22/1997; ; 700+ words
; History of Queen Conch Research Today there are approximately 230 published scientific papers on queen conch, Strombus gigas. Publication on this...published to document the rapid depletion of conch stocks throughout the Caribbean Sea. Second...
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DECLINE IN CONCH POPULATION MEANS LOSS OF NATURAL TREASURE.(TRAVEL)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 8/7/1994; 700+ words
; ...Turks and Caicos Islands A day's work for conch fishermen on this British West Indies island...resources. Since Wilson hooked his first conch two decades ago, the mollusk's rubbery...European markets. Pink-hued, spiral conch shells are a staple in souvenir shops...
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Translocation as a strategy to rehabilitate the queen conch (Strombus gigas) population in the Florida Keys.
Magazine article from: Fishery Bulletin; 4/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; Abstract--Queen conch (Strombus gigas) stocks in the Florida...harvesting this species since 1985, the local conch population has not recovered. In addition, previous work has reported that conch located in nearshore Keys waters are incapable...
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conch
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
conch , common name for certain marine gastropod...secures a foothold in the sand, and the conch jumps forward by means of the quick contraction...muscle called the columella muscle. Thus the conch lacks the creeping motion of most gastropods...
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William of Conches
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
William of Conches ( c. 1080– c. 1154), philosopher. A pupil of Bernard of Chartres , he sought to encourage the study of the profane...
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Snails
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
...while other species, such as the horse conch of southern Florida, may grow to 23...freshwater snails. The common names whelk and conch refer to large snails. Whelk, derived...shells are often inhabited by hermit crabs. Conch comes from the Latin and Spanish concha...
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Buonanni, Filippo
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
...Picchi of Ancona that “ the conches called ‘ Ballani ’...is oviparous, and that “ all conches are generated spontaneously by the mud...sandy mud. ” Convinced that the conches were heartless and bloodless, Buonanni...
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Divakaruni, Chitra Banerjee 1956-
Book article from: Something About the Author
...Troy Howell, American Girl (Middleton, WI), 2002. The Conch Bearer (juvenile), Roaring Brook Press (Brookfield, CT...works for middle-grade readers: Neela, Victory Song and The Conch Bearer. The Mistress of Spices revolves around an Indian girl...
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