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Planetary Health and Indigenous World Views, Week 12: Planetary Health and…
Planetary Health and Indigenous World Views
3) Policy Action Area 2. Aims to strengthen inclusive and trustworthy relationship-building without forms of systemic prejudice, discrimination, and oppression.
Relationship building impacts community, health systems, business and industry, local governance, and academia.
reciprocal relationship building
cultural safety and trauma-informed health care
supportive communities
renewable energy and ethical, sustainable business models
health equity governance
decolonize didactics and academia
intersectoral exchange
learning from one another
5) Policy Action Area 4. Work to mobilize transformative action via IUHPE governance, membership, and engagement structures.
This requires ongoing monitoring and evaluation, a commitment to decolonizing these structures and transforming core principles and actions within health promotion to address Indigenous ways of knowing and doing along with racialized and minority perspectives and needs.
evaluative evidence
local vs. global effects
distinction of consent and approval vs. consultation of Indigenous communities
collaboration and teamwork
systemic reform
advocacy
engagement of key stakeholder and partners
4) Policy Action Area 3. Goal is to empower the promotion of planetary health at the individual and community level.
This places environmental and planetary health at the forefront of policy, governance, and economic sector priorities.
climate change
consider disproportionate health impacts on marginalized populations
equitable distribution of assets
Indigenous governance, healing, and land stewardship
ecosystem sustainability
1) Amplifying Indigenous voices and ways of knowing within health promotion is key to ensuring environmental health, well-being, and equity is implemented into all policies.
In doing so, Indigenous health promoters utilize their longstanding capacity to promote sustainable food governance, biodiversity, and ecological integration.
reconciliation
Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and doing
decolonizing practice
self-reflexivity
reflection on social positionality
2) Policy Action Area 1. Aims to dismantle systemic colonialism that perpetuates structural racism and violence, exploitation, and inequities.
This aim necessitates active and equitable sharing and listening, placing Indigenous governance over colonial approaches, and working toward centering Indigenous wisdom and ways of knowing for relationship and equity building.
self-determination of Indigenous communities
listening circles
power of storytelling
Two-Eyed Seeing
learning and (un)learning
Week 12: Planetary Health and Indigenous World Views