Self-Identification in Black, Red, Brown, and White: A clarion call to address medical racism in Native American communities

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Self-Identification in Black, Red, Brown, and White: A clarion call to address medical racism in Native American communities
Abstract
This chapter provides a brief autobiographical account of her multiethnic and racial background as a Louisiana Creole in south Louisiana. The author points out that among all racial and ethnic groups in the United States, Indigenous people are the only ones that require some form of lineal Native American descent or blood quantum. The chapter provides an ancestry account of two American Indian tribes along the bayous of south Louisiana, the Chitimacha, and the United Houma Nation. While one federally recognized tribe has attempted to remove all relations to individuals of Black, Negro, or African American descent, the other has closed enrollment to new members (despite lineal descent), with the unifying factor among these communities being establishing progenitors. Finally, the author articulates how lack of access to resources related to issues such as COVID-19 has perpetuated the historical legacy of medical racism in tribal and underserved communities in the United States.
Book Title
Navigating Academia During COVID-19: Perspectives and Strategies from BIPOC Women
Date
2023
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Place
Cham
Pages
3-6
ISBN
978-3-031-35613-1
Citation Key
boudreauxSelfIdentificationBlackRed2023
Accessed
9/19/23, 1:54 PM
Short Title
Self-Identification in Black, Red, Brown, and White
Language
en
Library Catalog
Springer Link
Citation
Boudreaux, M. (2023). Self-Identification in Black, Red, Brown, and White: A clarion call to address medical racism in Native American communities. In A. Njoku & M. Evans (Eds.), Navigating Academia During COVID-19: Perspectives and Strategies from BIPOC Women (pp. 3–6). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35613-1_1