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The Covid-19 Pandemic: An Immigrant-Indigenous Family Story on Reconnection, Resistance, and Resiliency
Journal of Comparative Family Studies ( IF 1.366 ) Pub Date : 2020-10-01 , DOI: 10.3138/jcfs.51.3-4.016
Ranjan Datta 1 , Jebunnessa Chapola 2 , Prarthona Datta 3 , Prokriti Datta 3
Affiliation  

The COVID-19 pandemic has created a significant effect on the vulnerable portion of society, particularly on Indigenous and visible minority immigrants We, as a minority family from Bangladesh who are on Indigenous land in Saskatchewan Canada, explore family-based pandemic resiliency, mainly focusing on Indigenous notions of resistance and reconnection This article discusses our family-based resiliency on family interaction, social distancing, and isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic This paper explores a family-based decolonizing autoethnography as a methodology for understanding health and wellness from an immigrant family's perspective We discussed why Indigenous and immigrant stories matters for building resiliency and resistance within a family How do we know it is effective? How can it be helpful for others? Here, we highlight how Indigenous Elders, Knowledge-Keepers, and ancestors' stories helped us for building our resistance and reconnection to be active, hopeful, and joyful during the COVID-19 pandemic © Journal of Comparative Family Studies

中文翻译:

Covid-19 大流行:关于重新联系、抵抗和复原力的移民土著家庭故事

COVID-19 大流行对社会的弱势群体产生了重大影响,尤其是对土著和可见的少数族裔移民我们作为来自孟加拉国的少数族裔家庭,他们居住在加拿大萨斯喀彻温省的土著土地上,探索基于家庭的流行病弹性,主要关注关于抵抗和重新联系的土著概念 本文讨论了在 COVID-19 大流行期间我们在家庭互动、社会疏远和孤立方面的基于家庭的弹性 本文探讨了基于家庭的非殖民化自我民族志作为了解移民健康和福祉的方法家庭的观点 我们讨论了为什么土著和移民故事对于在家庭中建立弹性和抵抗力很重要 我们如何知道它是有效的?它如何对其他人有帮助?这里,
更新日期:2020-10-01
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