Indigenous College Students' Violent Victimization, Help-Seeking, Service Utilization, and Needs: A Mixed-Methods Approach

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Description
Indigenous Peoples (Native American, American Indian, and Alaska Native) have experienced high rates of violence and victimization since colonization – which continues to present day. However, little is known regarding the victimization experiences of Indigenous college students. Furthermore, universities are

Indigenous Peoples (Native American, American Indian, and Alaska Native) have experienced high rates of violence and victimization since colonization – which continues to present day. However, little is known regarding the victimization experiences of Indigenous college students. Furthermore, universities are struggling to recruit and retain Indigenous college students, evident by their low enrollment and matriculation rates. One possible reason for this could be universities' inability to support Indigenous students, especially those who have experienced victimization. Yet, there is little empirical knowledge regarding how universities can best support these Indigenous students. To address these gaps, the current dissertation takes a holistic approach to understanding Indigenous individuals’ needs within the university context. Drawing upon Indigenous student survey and interview data, in addition to faculty and staff interview data, this dissertation explores the victimization experiences of Indigenous college students, their service utilization, informal help-seeking behaviors, barriers to seeking help, and ways to improve university services. Overall, findings reveal that Indigenous college students in this sample experience high rates of victimization. Additionally, having culturally relevant services, culturally competent service providers, and being able to practice their culture is necessary to best support Indigenous college students. Recommendations for universities are presented to improve the campus environment for Indigenous college students.
Date Created
2023
Agent

Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples and the Victimization Experiences of Indigenous College Students: A Strengths-Based Focus on Resilience

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Description
This study draws upon original data to identify protective factors of resilience among Indigenous college students who experience victimization with the goal of facilitating safety and health. The data draws from 16 interviews and 95 surveys with Indigenous college

This study draws upon original data to identify protective factors of resilience among Indigenous college students who experience victimization with the goal of facilitating safety and health. The data draws from 16 interviews and 95 surveys with Indigenous college students about their victimization, including their experiences with the global issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples (MMIP). This research uses a decolonizing methodology, a trauma-informed approach, and a human-centered design while incorporating aspects of community-based participatory research with Indigenous populations. Many participants experienced at least one form of victimization (82%), and nearly all (94%) were aware of the MMIP crisis. Interviews revealed that MMIP had an emotional, psychological, and social impact on students regardless of their relationship with a victim. Participants identified several protective factors that enhanced their resilience, including reclaiming identity, reciprocity, taking healing actions, self-reflection, taking healthy risks, having goals, being with their community and their family, and having courage and strength. These findings provide support for five culturally appropriate university policy recommendations to enhance Indigenous students’ resilience through culturally-competent programming, evaluation, and training.
Date Created
2023
Agent