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Forming strong cultural identities in an intersecting space of indigeneity and autism in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand
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Peer Review Status
Peer Reviewed
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Author (aut): Simpson, Heather
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Abstract |
Abstract
Through its hegemonic ideologies, colonialism and its constituent underpinnings of religious and racial superiority, necessitates the erasure of the cultural identity of people outside the dominant Euro-Western culture and as non-normative groups, Indigenous Peoples and autistic people disabled per colonized paradigms, experience oppression, and subjugation harmful to self-identity and mental health. This article discusses culturally-responsive interventions aimed at supporting strong cultural identity formation and safeguard Indigenous and autistic people from stigmatization, misrepresentation, and erasure of identity. Promising research uses Indigenous knowledges in education and arts programming to disrupt patterns of social injustice, exclusion, and cultural genocide while promote positive identity formation, pride, and resilience for Indigenous autistics. While Indigenous and autistic people exist globally, this article reviews literature from Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand. |
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Publication Identifier
issn: 1177-1801
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Physical Description Note
PRE-PUBLICATION
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DOI |
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/11771801211039274
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Keywords |
Keywords
intersectionality; autism; Indigenous; identity; culture; disability
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jibc_3214.pdf405.15 KB
1161-Extracted Text.txt57.28 KB
Cite this
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English
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Forming strong cultural identities in an intersecting space of indigeneity and autism in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand
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application/pdf
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414869
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