Land Rights and Health Outcomes in American Indian/Alaska Native Children

Author:

Burns Joseph12,Angelino Alessandra C.32,Lewis Kyna4,Gotcsik Marah E.5,Bell Ronny A.6,Bell Joseph7,Empey Allison8

Affiliation:

1. Cohen Children’s Medical Center of New York, Queens, New York

2. Contributed equally as co-first authors

3. Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

4. Oregon Health Sciences University, School of Medicine, Portland, Oregon

5. Alaska Native Medical Center, Anchorage, Alaska

6. Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston Salem, North Carolina

7. Children’s Health Carolina, Pembroke, North Carolina

8. Department of Pediatrics, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon

Abstract

American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) land rights, sovereignty conflicts, and health outcomes have been significantly influenced by settler colonialism. This principle has driven the numerous relocations and forced assimilation of AI/AN children as well as the claiming of AI/AN lands across the United States. As tribes across the country begin to reclaim these lands and others continue to struggle for sovereignty, it is imperative to recognize that land rights are a determinant of health in AI/AN children. Aside from the demonstrated biological risks of environmental health injustices including exposure to air pollution, heavy metals, and lack of running water, AI/AN children must also face the challenges of historical trauma, the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples crisis, and health care inequity based on land allocation. Although there is an undeniable relationship between land rights and the health of AI/AN children, there is a need for extensive research into the impacts of land rights and recognition of sovereignty on the health of AI/AN children. In this article we aim to summarize existing evidence describing the impact of these factors on the health of AI/AN children and provide strateg ies that can help pediatricians care and advocate for this population.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference64 articles.

1. Caring for American Indian and Alaska Native children and adolescents;Bell;Pediatrics,2021

2. Decolonization is not a metaphor;Tuck;Decolonization,2012

3. Introducing settler colonial studies;Veracini;Settl Colon Stud,2011

4. Understanding colonialism and settler colonialism as distinct formations;Veracini;Interventions (Lond),2014

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