Indigenous Community Views of Disability in Canada: Protocol for a Scoping Review
Andrés Rojas-Cárdenas, Shaun Cleaver, Ivan Sarmiento, Julie Rock, Yan Grenier, Francis Charrier, Rose-Anne Gosselin, Anne Cockcroft, Neil Andersson

TL;DR
This study aims to understand how Indigenous communities in Canada view disability, focusing on cultural and historical perspectives.
Contribution
The study introduces a scoping review protocol to map Indigenous perspectives on disability in Canada.
Findings
Indigenous concepts of disability are deeply rooted in cultural and historical contexts.
Western disability approaches often overlook Indigenous voices and perspectives.
The review will include diverse study types in English and French to capture comprehensive insights.
Abstract
Indigenous people do not necessarily view disability in the same way as do other groups. Indigenous concepts of disability are connected to their ancestral history, cultural customs, and environmental context. Some Indigenous languages do not contain a word equivalent to disability. Western approaches to disability seldom reflect the voices of Indigenous people. The objective of this scoping review is to collate the perspectives, concepts, and understandings of disability in Indigenous communities in Canada and to map the factors that influence social approaches to disability from an Indigenous perspective. Following the methodological framework for scoping reviews of Arksey and O’Malley, we will search electronic databases, including PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, EBSCOhost ProQuest, Autochtonia, and APA PsycINFO. We will search gray literature through the Google search engine,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDisability Rights and Representation · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders · Family and Disability Support Research
