Framing an Indigenous Food Sovereignty Research Agenda

Author:

Nguyen Cassandra J.1,Wilbur Rachel E.2,Henderson Austin3ORCID,Sowerwine Jennifer4,Mucioki Megan5,Sarna-Wojcicki Daniel4,Ferguson Gary L.3,Maudrie Tara L.6,Moore-Wilson Harleigh7,Wark Kyle8,Jernigan Valarie Blue Bird9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California–Davis, Davis, CA, USA

2. Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA, USA

3. Washington State University, Seattle, WA, USA

4. University of California–Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA

5. Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, USA

6. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA

7. Osage Nation, Pawhuska, OK, USA

8. Southcentral Foundation, Anchorage, AK, USA

9. Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK USA

Abstract

Access to healthy and appealing food is essential for individuals to be able to live a healthy and quality life. For decades, food security has been a priority issue for public health professionals. Food sovereignty expands upon the concept of food insecurity (i.e., having access to nutritious and culturally relevant food) by incorporating people’s rights to define their own food system. The expanded focus of food sovereignty on food systems prioritizes public health professionals’ role in supporting environmental- and systems-level initiatives and evaluating their implications for health, economics, and the natural environment. Food sovereignty is of particular importance for Indigenous peoples (i.e., American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities). Colonization had demonstrable consequences, with many Indigenous communities being forcibly relocated from traditional lands, alongside the destruction of traditional food sources. Indigenous food sovereignty aligns with the sovereign nation status that American Indian tribes and Alaska Native communities have with the United States. Furthermore, the worldviews that incorporate Indigenous communities’ relational responsibilities to care for their food systems, according to their traditional practices and beliefs (Coté, 2016; Morrison, 2011), uniquely positions Indigenous peoples to lead food sovereignty initiatives. In this article, we explore what is currently known regarding food sovereignty and health. We then discuss opportunities to expand the evidence on Indigenous food sovereignty’s relationships with (1) health and well being, (2) economics, (3) the natural environment, and (4) programming facilitators and barriers.

Funder

Office of Minority Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference34 articles.

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2. A Healthy Retail Intervention in Native American Convenience Stores: The THRIVE Community-Based Participatory Research Study

3. Decolonizing Diet: Healing by Reclaiming Traditional Indigenous Foodways

4. The American Indian Holocaust: Healing Historical Unresolved Grief

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