TY - JOUR
T1 - Learning from the past
T2 - Young Indigenous people's accounts of bloodborne viral and sexually transmitted infections as resilience narratives
AU - Mooney-Somers, Julie
AU - Olsen, Anna
AU - Erick, Wani
AU - Scott, Robert
AU - Akee, Angie
AU - Kaldor, John
AU - Maher, Lisa
PY - 2011/2
Y1 - 2011/2
N2 - The Indigenous Resilience Project is an Australian community-based participatory research project using qualitative methods to explore young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people's views of blood-borne viral and sexually transmitted infections (BBV/STI) affecting their communities. In this paper we present an analysis of narratives from young people who had a previous BBV/STI diagnosis to explore how they actively negotiate the experience of BBV/STI infection to construct a classic resilience narrative. We examine two overarching themes: first, the context of infection and diagnosis, including ignorance of STI/BBV prior to infection/diagnosis and, second, turning points and transformations in the form of insights, behaviours, roles and agency. Responding to critical writing on resilience theory, we argue that providing situated accounts of adversity from the perspectives of young Indigenous people prioritises their subjective understandings and challenges normative definitions of resilience.
AB - The Indigenous Resilience Project is an Australian community-based participatory research project using qualitative methods to explore young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people's views of blood-borne viral and sexually transmitted infections (BBV/STI) affecting their communities. In this paper we present an analysis of narratives from young people who had a previous BBV/STI diagnosis to explore how they actively negotiate the experience of BBV/STI infection to construct a classic resilience narrative. We examine two overarching themes: first, the context of infection and diagnosis, including ignorance of STI/BBV prior to infection/diagnosis and, second, turning points and transformations in the form of insights, behaviours, roles and agency. Responding to critical writing on resilience theory, we argue that providing situated accounts of adversity from the perspectives of young Indigenous people prioritises their subjective understandings and challenges normative definitions of resilience.
KW - Australia
KW - Indigenous people
KW - Resilience
KW - Sexual health
KW - Young people
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=78650389710&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13691058.2010.520742
DO - 10.1080/13691058.2010.520742
M3 - Article
SN - 1369-1058
VL - 13
SP - 173
EP - 186
JO - Culture, Health and Sexuality
JF - Culture, Health and Sexuality
IS - 2
ER -