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    Survey of living conditions of Arctic indigenous peoples

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    • doi.pangaea.de
    Updated Jan 6, 2018
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    Kruse, Jack; Poppel, Birger; Abryutina, Larissa; Duhaime, Gerard; Martin, Stephanie; Poppel, Mariekathrine; Kruse, Margaret; Ward, Ed; Cochran, Patricia; Hanna, Virgene (2018). Survey of living conditions of Arctic indigenous peoples [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.812678
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 6, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    PANGAEA Data Publisher for Earth and Environmental Science
    Authors
    Kruse, Jack; Poppel, Birger; Abryutina, Larissa; Duhaime, Gerard; Martin, Stephanie; Poppel, Mariekathrine; Kruse, Margaret; Ward, Ed; Cochran, Patricia; Hanna, Virgene
    Area covered
    Arctic
    Description

    Major findings of the Survey of Living Conditions in the Arctic (SLiCA) are: (1) A combination of traditional activities and cash employment is the prevailing lifestyle of Arctic indigenous peoples; (2) family ties, social support of each other, and traditional activities have a lot to do with why indigenous people choose to remain in Arctic communities; (3) well-being is closely related to job opportunities, locally available fish and game, and a sense of local control. Well-being and depression (and related problems like suicide) are flip sides of the same coin. Improving well-being may reduce social problems; and, (4) health conditions vary widely in the Arctic: three-in-four Greenlandic Inuit self-rate their health as at least very good compared with one-in-two Canadian and Alaska Inuit and one-in-five Chukotka indigenous people. Findings are based on 7,200 interviews in a probability sample of Inupiat settlement regions of Alaska, the four Inuit settlement regions of Canada, all of Greenland, and the Anadyrskij, Anadyr, Shmidtovs, Beringovskij, Chukotskij, Iujl'tinskij, Bilibinskij, Chaunskij, Providenskij, Uel'Kal' districts of Chukotka. Indigenous people and researchers from Greenland, Russia, Canada, the United States, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland collaborated on all phases of the study.

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Share
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TwitterTwitter
Email
Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
Cite
Kruse, Jack; Poppel, Birger; Abryutina, Larissa; Duhaime, Gerard; Martin, Stephanie; Poppel, Mariekathrine; Kruse, Margaret; Ward, Ed; Cochran, Patricia; Hanna, Virgene (2018). Survey of living conditions of Arctic indigenous peoples [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.812678

Survey of living conditions of Arctic indigenous peoples

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Jan 6, 2018
Dataset provided by
PANGAEA Data Publisher for Earth and Environmental Science
Authors
Kruse, Jack; Poppel, Birger; Abryutina, Larissa; Duhaime, Gerard; Martin, Stephanie; Poppel, Mariekathrine; Kruse, Margaret; Ward, Ed; Cochran, Patricia; Hanna, Virgene
Area covered
Arctic
Description

Major findings of the Survey of Living Conditions in the Arctic (SLiCA) are: (1) A combination of traditional activities and cash employment is the prevailing lifestyle of Arctic indigenous peoples; (2) family ties, social support of each other, and traditional activities have a lot to do with why indigenous people choose to remain in Arctic communities; (3) well-being is closely related to job opportunities, locally available fish and game, and a sense of local control. Well-being and depression (and related problems like suicide) are flip sides of the same coin. Improving well-being may reduce social problems; and, (4) health conditions vary widely in the Arctic: three-in-four Greenlandic Inuit self-rate their health as at least very good compared with one-in-two Canadian and Alaska Inuit and one-in-five Chukotka indigenous people. Findings are based on 7,200 interviews in a probability sample of Inupiat settlement regions of Alaska, the four Inuit settlement regions of Canada, all of Greenland, and the Anadyrskij, Anadyr, Shmidtovs, Beringovskij, Chukotskij, Iujl'tinskij, Bilibinskij, Chaunskij, Providenskij, Uel'Kal' districts of Chukotka. Indigenous people and researchers from Greenland, Russia, Canada, the United States, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland collaborated on all phases of the study.

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