The impact of neoliberal generative mechanisms on Indigenous health: a critical realist scoping review

被引:0
|
作者
Brianna Poirier
Sneha Sethi
Dandara Haag
Joanne Hedges
Lisa Jamieson
机构
[1] Adelaide Dental School,Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health
[2] University of Adelaide,undefined
来源
Globalization and Health | / 18卷
关键词
Neoliberalism; Indigenous health; Health equity; Globalisation; Indigenous peoples; Critical realism;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The pervasive nature and colonial foundations of neoliberalism has significant ramifications for Indigenous health, globally. Not only does neoliberalism undermine Indigenous collectivist values by emphasising personal autonomy, but the exploitation of natural resources has unique implications for Indigenous wellbeing. Therefore, this scoping review aims to synthesise evidence that articulates the impacts of neoliberalism on global Indigenous health inequities. Two reviewers searched PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, and ProQuest Central to identify records eligible for inclusion. The search was not restricted by geographic location or language. Using principles of qualitative meta-aggregation, generative mechanism summaries and illustrations were extracted from each of the included articles, synthesised into broader categories, then considered in the context of neoliberal ideologies. The systematic search identified 9952 unique records, of which 38 fully satisfied the inclusion criteria. Findings represented 23 Indigenous communities across 12 countries and considered the impacts of neoliberalism across 16 health outcomes. Eighty-eight generative mechanisms of neoliberalism and 12 generative mechanisms of resistance were extracted from the included articles and mapped against four core principles of neoliberalism: competitive and private markets, reduced public expenditure on infrastructure, personal autonomy, and deregulation that facilitates economic activity. Overwhelmingly, neoliberalism has manifest impacts, through various pathways, on poor health outcomes and experiences for Indigenous communities included in this review. Importantly, Indigenous communities continue to resist the impacts of neoliberalism through advocacy, reclamation of traditional practices, and opposition to industrial development. Consideration and investigation of neoliberal structures and ideologies must become common practice in health equity scholarship. Actors within neoliberal societies must resist dominant epistemological, ontological, and praxiological stances that reinforce the supremacy of colonial values and subalternation of Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and doing to begin effectively addressing Indigenous health inequities.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The impact of neoliberal generative mechanisms on Indigenous health: a critical realist scoping review
    Poirier, Brianna
    Sethi, Sneha
    Haag, Dandara
    Hedges, Joanne
    Jamieson, Lisa
    GLOBALIZATION AND HEALTH, 2022, 18 (01)
  • [2] Generative mechanisms of AI implementation: A critical realist perspective on predictive maintenance
    Stohr, Alexander
    Ollig, Philipp
    Keller, Robert
    Rieger, Alexander
    INFORMATION AND ORGANIZATION, 2024, 34 (02)
  • [3] Identifying Generative Mechanisms in a Mobile Health (mHealth) Project in Sierra Leone: A Critical Realist Framework for Retroduction
    Wall, P. J.
    Lewis, Dave
    Hederman, Lucy
    INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES FOR DEVELOPMENT: STRENGTHENING SOUTHERN-DRIVEN COOPERATION AS A CATALYST FOR ICT4D, PT II, 2019, 552 : 39 - 48
  • [4] Realist evaluation of health promotion interventions: a scoping review
    Malengreaux, Segolene
    Doumont, Dominique
    Scheen, Benedicte
    Van Durme, Therese
    Aujoulat, Isabelle
    HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL, 2022, 37 (05)
  • [5] Identifying generative mechanisms through affordances: a framework for critical realist data analysis
    Bygstad, Bendik
    Munkvold, Bjorn Erik
    Volkoff, Olga
    JOURNAL OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, 2016, 31 (01) : 83 - 96
  • [6] Health effects of Indigenous language use and revitalization: a realist review
    D. H. Whalen
    Melissa E. Lewis
    Stefanie Gillson
    Brittany McBeath
    Bri Alexander
    Kate Nyhan
    International Journal for Equity in Health, 21
  • [7] Health effects of Indigenous language use and revitalization: a realist review
    Whalen, D. H.
    Lewis, Melissa E.
    Gillson, Stefanie
    McBeath, Brittany
    Alexander, Bri
    Nyhan, Kate
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH, 2022, 21 (01)
  • [8] Elevating the Uses of Storytelling Methods Within Indigenous Health Research: A Critical, Participatory Scoping Review
    Rieger, Kendra L.
    Horton, Mabel
    Copenace, Sherry
    Bennett, Marlyn
    Buss, Mandy
    Chudyk, Anna M.
    Cook, Lillian
    Hornan, Bobbie
    Horrill, Tara
    Linton, Janice
    McPherson, Kim
    Rattray, Jennifer Moore
    Murray, Kealy
    Phillips-Beck, Wanda
    Sinclair, Rebecca
    Slavutskiy, Olga
    Stewart, Rebecca
    Schultz, Annette S. H.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE METHODS, 2023, 22
  • [9] Indigenous approaches to health assessment: a scoping review protocol
    Sharma, Nabina
    Walker, Jennifer D.
    Wenghofer, Elizabeth
    Moeke-Pickering, Taima
    Lindenbach, Jeannette
    SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2024, 13 (01)
  • [10] Multisectoral actions in primary health care: A realist synthesis of scoping review
    Khatri, Resham B.
    Erku, Daniel
    Endalamaw, Aklilu
    Wolka, Eskinder
    Nigatu, Frehiwot
    Zewdie, Anteneh
    Assefa, Yibeltal
    PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (08):