4.6 Article

Just because they aren't human doesn't mean they aren't alive: The methodological potential of photovoice to examine human-nature relations as a source of resilience and health among urban Indigenous youth

Journal

HEALTH & PLACE
Volume 61, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2019.102268

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Urban Aboriginal Knowledge Network
  2. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Partnership Grant [895-2011-1001]
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FRN 130797]
  4. Saskatchewan Prevention Institute
  5. Department of Community Health and Epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan

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Photovoice has been widely used as a participatory visual research methodology within the social sciences and health research. Given photovoice's critical and pedagogical potential, its advancement within Indigenous resilience and health research has been particularly prevalent. However, it has largely failed to problematize the concept of 'voice' to the extent of theorizing and engaging with the 'voices' of other kinds of life with consequences for theory and method. In this paper we re-examine the methodological potential and utility of photovoice methods to include other-than-human 'voices' during the empirical study of place-making, human-nature relations, and resilience and health. We analyze photo-narratives from a community-based, participatory research project involving Indigenous youth in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan in order to revisit 1) what we did to produce those images and 2) what we saw and heard in images. Our results suggest that when photovoice methods consider a relational and affective understanding of subjective reality during research practice, they have the capacity to capture and handle other-than-human 'voices'. Accordingly, we discuss future directions when adapting photovoice methods for the study of environmental repossession and dispossession within contested contexts of and encounters with methodological complexity, uncertainty, and emergence.

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