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Accepted Paper:

"I have strong hopes for the future": time orientations and resilience among Canadian Indigenous youth  
Andrew Hatala (University of Manitoba)

Paper short abstract:

In this paper, I will explore how concepts of time and the future inform processes of resilience among Indigenous adolescents within an urban Canadian context.

Paper long abstract:

In this paper, I will explore how concepts of time and the future inform processes of resilience among Indigenous adolescents within an urban Canadian context. This study employed a modified grounded theory methodology by conducting 38 qualitative interviews with 28 Indigenous youth (ages 15-25) over the course of 1 year. The analysis revealed complex processes of and navigations between moments of distress and strategies for resilience. The distressing contexts in which Indigenous youth often find themselves can impact the development of their concepts of time and limit their abilities to conceptualize a future. A future time orientation (FTO) emerged as central to processes of resilience and was supported by (a) nurturing a sense of belonging, (b) developing self-mastery, and (c) fostering cultural continuity.

Panel P07a
Engagements with time : re-envisioning temporality through lived experience I
  Session 1 Thursday 8 April, 2021, -