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Interculturalism

Interculturalism is a political movement that supports cross-cultural dialogue and challenging self-segregation tendencies within cultures.[1] Interculturalism involves moving beyond mere passive acceptance of multiple cultures existing in a society and instead promotes dialogue and interaction between cultures.[2] Interculturalism is often used to describe the set of relations between indigenous and western ideals, grounded in values of mutual respect.[3]

Origin edit

Interculturalism has arisen in response to criticisms of existing policies of multiculturalism, such as criticisms that such policies had failed to create inclusion of different cultures within society, but instead have divided society by legitimizing segregated separate communities that have isolated themselves and accentuated their specificity.[1] It is based on the recognition of both differences and similarities between cultures.[4] It has addressed the risk of the creation of absolute relativism within postmodernity and in multiculturalism.[4] Interculturalism has been used as a tool of Native American and indigenous rights activists to achieve rights and recognition.[3][5]

Definition edit

Philosopher Martha Nussbaum in her work Cultivating Humanity, describes interculturalism as involving "the recognition of common human needs across cultures and of dissonance and critical dialogue within cultures" and that interculturalists "reject the claim of identity politics that only members of a particular group have the ability to understand the perspective of that group".[6] Anthropologist Joanne Rappaport describes interculturalism as consisting of three main threads: a method of connection, a political philosophy aimed at creating utopian indigenous citizenship, and a challenge to traditional ethnography.[7][3] Rappaport discusses the importance of interculturalism in the Colombian Indigenous movement for human rights and recognition.

Usage edit

Interculturalism has been included in different national constitutions[8][9][10] across Latin America, including Bolivia,[11] Ecuador (2008),[12][circular reference][13] Brazil, and across Europe.[14] Colombia includes the concept of multiculturalism[15] and pluriethnic citizenship in its 1991 constitution.[16][3] The Ecuadorian constitution has been described as in between both multiculturalism and interculturalism.[17]

The United Nations' agency UNESCO adopted the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in 2005, which declares support for interculturalism.[18] In Germany, all universities are required to have a section on intercultural competence in their social work programs, that involves students being able to be open to listen and communicate with people of different cultural backgrounds, have knowledge of the backgrounds of cultural groups, knowledge of existing stereotypes and prejudices involving cultural groups, and other criteria.[4] Salman Cheema, the Head of Marketing and Communications of the British Council, in an article titled "From Multiculturalism to Interculturalism – A British perspective", spoke of an event co-hosted by the British Council and Canada's Institute for Research on Public Policy (IRPP) in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on April 11, 2013, interculturalist advocate Phil Wood declared that multiculturalism has faced serious problems that need to be resolved through interculturalism, and rejected those opponents of multiculturalism who seek to restore a pre-multiculturalist monoculturalist society.[19] Several days later in Montreal, the New Democratic Party of Canada (NDP) declared support for interculturalism in the preamble of its constitution adopted its federal convention held in Montreal on April 14, 2013.[20]

Intercultural Health edit

Intercultural health applies the concepts of interculturalism to health settings. It involves conceptualizing health itself as part of a broader cultural framework. Intercultural health defines what counts as "health" as outside purely biomedicine. In many cases, intercultural health is an approach that seeks to reduce gaps between indigenous health and biomedical health systems. Indigenous health systems, sometimes grouped in with alternative medicine, often involve different kinds of healers, plant medicine techniques, holistic medicine, and indigenous knowledge that has been passed down through generations. Intercultural health systems often state the goal of creating better health outcomes in indigenous communities and generating mutual respect between biomedical practitioners and indigenous healers.[21]

The implementation of intercultural health practices is associated with the project of decentralizing health systems, especially in Latin America.[22][23] Ecuadorian epidemiologist and physician Jaime Breilh is a proponent of intercultural health for its benefits on population health.[24] Structural violence, a term developed by American medical anthropologist and physician Paul Farmer, describes a lack of available health care as a form of violence.[25] Supporters of intercultural health care models cite addressing structural violence as a goal.[26] The goal of many intercultural health models is to treat indigenous knowledge with the same respect as biomedicine. Intercultural health models have been associated with improved health outcomes in indigenous communities .[27][26][28][29]

Effective intercultural health projects involve buy-in from all cultures represented.[30] Anthropologist Catherine Walsh describes the concept of "critical interculturality." She defines this as using indigenous concepts to question the existing structure and advance epistemic change.[31][30] This type of change requires what anthropologist Linda Tuhiwai Smith calls decolonizing methodologies, which call for a reconsideration of what counts as knowledge.[32] There are examples of intercultural health projects that do not fully incorporate indigenous methodologies and instead continue to perpetuate the western hegemonic order.[33]

Intercultural health projects often involve connecting traditional medicine, or ancestral medicine, or indigenous medicine, with western, biomedicine. A series of case studies highlight intercultural health projects that integrate biomedicine with traditional medicine, in Chile,[33] Ecuador,[33] Bolivia,[21] Colombia,[33] Guatemala,[33] Suriname,[33] and Ghana.[34] Intercultural health education is a priority at the medical school in the Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar in Quito, Ecuador.[35] Intercultural education models have been built into schools in many indigenous communities across the Americas with the goal of passing down aspects of the particular indigenous practices and culture.[36] These are often focused on language acquisition.[37] Peru and Ecuador have both implemented intercultural indigenous language acquisition programs.[38]

Intercultural health concepts applied in United States biomedical settings are often called cultural competency.[39] The explanatory model, the original framework of cultural competency, was developed by Arthur Kleinman. It is a technique grounded in a set of questions that providers can use to understand how a patient understands their own illness. This model has been applied in many US medical schools.[40][41] Intercultural health projects are seen as distinct from culturally competent ones because of their goal in achieving indigenous political rights and reframing knowledge bases to include indigenous concepts. One of the criticisms of the cultural competency model is that it can create biases among health providers, who might begin to treat patients differently because of their cultural background, without allowing for heterogeneity within a cultural group.[42] It can also lead to worse health outcomes in minority groups when health care providers make assumptions about patients' health behaviors and histories based on their race, ethnicity, or culture.[42] The concept of "witnessing" was developed by Ellen Davenport as a way to overcome cultural competency stereotyping.[43]

Reception edit

Interculturalism has both supporters and opponents amongst people who endorse multiculturalism.[1] Gerald Delanty views interculturalism as capable of incorporating multiculturalism within it.[44] Ali Rattansi, in his book Multiculturalism: A Very Short Introduction (2011) argues that Interculturalism offers a more fruitful way than conventional multiculturalism for different ethnic groups to co-exist in an atmosphere that encourages both better inter-ethnic understanding and civility; he provides useful examples of how interculturalist projects in the UK have shown in practice a constructive way forward for promoting multi-ethnic civility. Based on a considerable body of research, he also sets out the outlines of a new interpretation of global history which shows that concepts of tolerance are not restricted to the West, and that what is usually regarded as a unique Western cultural achievement should more appropriately be regarded as a Eurasian achievement. He thus offers a more interculturalist view of global history which undermines notions of 'a clash of civilisations'.[citation needed]

In contrast, Nussbaum views interculturalism as distinct from multiculturalism and notes that several humanities professors have preferred interculturalism over multiculturalism because they view multiculturalism as being "associated with relativism and identity politics".[6]

The extent to which the principles of intercultural health are protected in practice under the Ecuadorian constitution are questioned by academics.[45] Some argue that interculturalism creates a binary, whereas pluriculturalism is more inclusive alternative.[46]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c John Nagle, Multiculturalism's Double-Bind: Creating Inclusivity Cosmopolitanism and Difference. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2009. P. 169.
  2. ^ Ibanez B. Penas, Ma. Carmen López Sáenz. Interculturalism: Between Identity and Diversity. Bern: Peter Lang AG, 2006. P. 15.
  3. ^ a b c d Rappaport, Joanne (20 September 2005). Intercultural Utopias : Public Intellectuals, Cultural Experimentation, and Ethnic Pluralism in Colombia. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-8743-5. OCLC 1235889580.
  4. ^ a b c Hans van Ewijk. European Social Policy and Social Work: Citizenship-Based Social Work. Oxon, England, UK; New York, New York, USA: Routledge, 2010. P. 136.
  5. ^ Lopez, Luis Enrique (1991). Educación bilinque en Puno-Perú: Hacia un ajuste de cuentas. Lima: FOMCIENCIAS. pp. 173–217.
  6. ^ a b Femi James Kolapo. Immigrant Academics and Cultural Challenges in a Global Environment. Amherst, New York, USA: Cambria Press, 2008. P. 134.
  7. ^ "Ethnography", Wikipedia, 2022-04-14, retrieved 2022-04-19
  8. ^ Tironi, Ernesto (2011-11-11). "Las estrategias nacionales de desarrollo y la integración de los países andinos". Estudios Internacionales. 9 (34). doi:10.5354/0719-3769.1976.17186. ISSN 0719-3769.
  9. ^ "Interculturality and Decoloniality", On Decoloniality, Duke University Press, pp. 57–80, 2018, doi:10.1215/9780822371779-004, ISBN 978-0-8223-7177-9, retrieved 2022-05-07
  10. ^ Schavelzon, Salvador - Autor/a. El nacimiento del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia : etnografía de una Asamblea Constituyente. OCLC 1029746143.
  11. ^ "Constitution of Bolivia", Wikipedia, 2022-03-28, retrieved 2022-04-11
  12. ^ "2008 Constitution of Ecuador - Wikipedia". en.wikipedia.org. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  13. ^ Santos, Boaventura de Sousa (2013). Justicia indígena, plurinacionalidad e interculturalidad en Ecuador. Abya Yala. ISBN 978-9942-09-115-4. OCLC 876403478.
  14. ^ Piciocchi, Cinzia (2015). "From strategies to Constitutions. Identity, Multiculturalism and Interculturalism as Legal values: A Comparison between Europe and the Andean Countries". Revista general de derecho público comparado. 17.
  15. ^ "Multiculturalism", Wikipedia, 2022-04-13, retrieved 2022-04-19
  16. ^ "Colombian Constitution of 1991", Wikipedia, 2022-01-25, retrieved 2022-04-19
  17. ^ Huayamave, Germán Gerson (2017-06-06). "La Constitución ecuatoriana entre el multiculturalismo y la interculturalidad. Un análisis de su orientación". INNOVA Research Journal (in Spanish). 2 (6): 22–34. doi:10.33890/innova.v2.n6.2017.182. ISSN 2477-9024.
  18. ^ UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, Article 4 Paragraph 8.
  19. ^ http://www.britishcouncil.ca/our-team Background on Salman Cheema
  20. ^ "NDP convention: A new preamble is approved". Macleans.ca. 14 April 2013.
  21. ^ a b Torri, Maria Costanza (March 2012). "Intercultural Health Practices: Towards an Equal Recognition Between Indigenous Medicine and Biomedicine? A Case Study from Chile". Health Care Analysis. 20 (1): 31–49. doi:10.1007/s10728-011-0170-3. ISSN 1065-3058. PMID 21404028. S2CID 22639060.
  22. ^ Birn, Anne-Emanuelle; Zimmerman, Sarah; Garfield, Richard (January 2000). "To Decentralize or Not to Decentralize, is That the Question? Nicaraguan Health Policy under Structural Adjustment in the 1990s". International Journal of Health Services. 30 (1): 111–128. doi:10.2190/C6TB-B16Y-60HV-M3QW. ISSN 0020-7314. PMID 10707302. S2CID 1189417.
  23. ^ Bossert, Thomas; Larrañaga, Osvaldo; Ruiz Meir, Fernando (August 2000). "Decentralization of health systems in Latin America". Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública. 8 (1–2): 84–92. doi:10.1590/S1020-49892000000700011. ISSN 1020-4989. PMID 11026777.
  24. ^ Breilh, Jaime. New Method and Intercultural Awakening: Beyond the "Knowledge Illusion" of the Cartesian Bubble. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/med/9780190492786.003.0004. ISBN 978-0-19-049281-6.
  25. ^ Farmer, Paul (1996). "On Suffering and Structural Violence: A View from Below". Daedalus. 125 (1): 261–283. ISSN 0011-5266. JSTOR 20027362.
  26. ^ a b Spiegel, Jerry M.; Breilh, Jaime; Yassi, Annalee (2015-02-27). "Why language matters: insights and challenges in applying a social determination of health approach in a North-South collaborative research program". Globalization and Health. 11 (1): 9. doi:10.1186/s12992-015-0091-2. ISSN 1744-8603. PMC 4353467. PMID 25880442.
  27. ^ Breilh, Jaime (January 2021), "Why Critical Epidemiology?", Critical Epidemiology and the People's Health, Oxford University Press, pp. 47–132, doi:10.1093/med/9780190492786.003.0003, ISBN 978-0-19-049278-6, retrieved 2022-05-07
  28. ^ When people come first : critical studies in global health. João Guilherme Biehl, Adriana Petryna. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 2013. ISBN 978-1-4008-4680-1. OCLC 847525160.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  29. ^ Llamas, Ana; Mayhew, Susannah (December 2018). ""Five hundred years of medicine gone to waste"? Negotiating the implementation of an intercultural health policy in the Ecuadorian Andes". BMC Public Health. 18 (1): 686. doi:10.1186/s12889-018-5601-8. ISSN 1471-2458. PMC 5987654. PMID 29866186.
  30. ^ a b Briggs, Charles L. (2016). Tell me why my children died : rabies, indigenous knowledge, and communicative justice. Clara Mantini-Briggs. Durham. ISBN 978-0-8223-7439-8. OCLC 946055018.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  31. ^ Walsh, Catherine (2010-03-01). "Development as Buen Vivir: Institutional arrangements and (de)colonial entanglements". Development. 53 (1): 15–21. doi:10.1057/dev.2009.93. ISSN 1461-7072. S2CID 55952261.
  32. ^ Smith, Linda Tuhiwai (2021). Decolonizing methodologies : research and indigenous peoples (Third ed.). London. ISBN 978-1-78699-812-5. OCLC 1242806586.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  33. ^ a b c d e f Mignone, Javier; Bartlett, Judith; O'Neil, John; Orchard, Treena (December 2007). "Best practices in intercultural health: five case studies in Latin America". Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine. 3 (1): 31. doi:10.1186/1746-4269-3-31. ISSN 1746-4269. PMC 2000867. PMID 17803820.
  34. ^ Peprah, Prince; Agyemang-Duah, Williams; Arimiyaw, Abdul Wahid; Morgan, Anthony Kwame; Nachibi, Stephen Uwumbordo (January 2021). "Removing barriers to healthcare through an intercultural healthcare system: Focus group evidence". Journal of Integrative Medicine. 19 (1): 29–35. doi:10.1016/j.joim.2020.08.008. PMID 33288486. S2CID 227947942.
  35. ^ "Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar - Bienvenidos al nuevo portal". Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  36. ^ Aguirre, Guadalupe María Vernimmen (2019-06-24). "Educación Intercultural Bilingüe en Ecuador: Una revisión conceptual". Alteridad (in Spanish). 14 (2): 162–171. doi:10.17163/alt.v14n2.2019.01. ISSN 1390-8642. S2CID 198337526.
  37. ^ Rousseau, Stéphanie; Dargent, Eduardo (August 2019). "The Construction of Indigenous Language Rights in Peru: A Language Regime Approach". Journal of Politics in Latin America. 11 (2): 161–180. doi:10.1177/1866802X19866527. ISSN 1866-802X. S2CID 201365188.
  38. ^ Wroblewski, Michael (2021). Remaking Kichwa : language and indigenous pluralism in Amazonian Ecuador. London. ISBN 978-1-350-11556-9. OCLC 1227394760.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  39. ^ "Cultural competence", Wikipedia, 2021-10-30, retrieved 2022-04-11
  40. ^ Dinos, Sokratis; Ascoli, Micol; Owiti, John A.; Bhui, Kamaldeep (March 2017). "Assessing explanatory models and health beliefs: An essential but overlooked competency for clinicians". BJPsych Advances. 23 (2): 106–114. doi:10.1192/apt.bp.114.013680. ISSN 2056-4678. S2CID 78421640.
  41. ^ Fleckman, Julia M.; Dal Corso, Mark; Ramirez, Shokufeh; Begalieva, Maya; Johnson, Carolyn C. (2015). "Intercultural Competency in Public Health: A Call for Action to Incorporate Training into Public Health Education". Frontiers in Public Health. 3: 210. doi:10.3389/fpubh.2015.00210. ISSN 2296-2565. PMC 4556984. PMID 26389109.
  42. ^ a b Holmes, Seth M. (March 2012). "The clinical gaze in the practice of migrant health: Mexican migrants in the United States". Social Science & Medicine. 74 (6): 873–881. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.06.067. PMID 21992736. S2CID 6939785.
  43. ^ Davenport, Beverly Ann (2000). "Witnessing and the Medical Gaze: How Medical Students Learn to See at a Free Clinic for the Homeless". Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 14 (3): 310–327. doi:10.1525/maq.2000.14.3.310. ISSN 0745-5194. JSTOR 649501. PMID 11036581.
  44. ^ Gerald Delanty. Community: 2nd edition. Routledge, 2009. P. 71.
  45. ^ Gallegos, Carlos Andres; Waters, William F.; Kuhlmann, Anne Sebert (2016-12-18). "Discourse vs practice: are traditional practices and beliefs in pregnancy and childbirth included or excluded in the Ecuadorian health care system?: Table 1". International Health. 9 (2): 105–111. doi:10.1093/inthealth/ihw053. ISSN 1876-3413. PMID 27993953.
  46. ^ Araújo, Vanda (2018). "MULTICULTURALISMO, INTERCULTURALISMO E PLURICULTURALISMO: DEBATES E HORIZONTES POLÍTICOS E EPISTEMOLÓGICOS". Revista @mbienteeducação. 11: 29–44. doi:10.26843/ae19828632v11n12018p29a44.
  47. ^ Breilh, Jaime (2019), Vallverdú, Jordi; Puyol, Angel; Estany, Anna (eds.), "Critical Epidemiology in Latin America: Roots, Philosophical and Methodological Ruptures", Philosophical and Methodological Debates in Public Health, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 21–45, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-28626-2_3, ISBN 978-3-030-28625-5, S2CID 211461393, retrieved 2022-05-07

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Interculturalism at Wikimedia Commons

interculturalism, political, movement, that, supports, cross, cultural, dialogue, challenging, self, segregation, tendencies, within, cultures, involves, moving, beyond, mere, passive, acceptance, multiple, cultures, existing, society, instead, promotes, dialo. Interculturalism is a political movement that supports cross cultural dialogue and challenging self segregation tendencies within cultures 1 Interculturalism involves moving beyond mere passive acceptance of multiple cultures existing in a society and instead promotes dialogue and interaction between cultures 2 Interculturalism is often used to describe the set of relations between indigenous and western ideals grounded in values of mutual respect 3 Contents 1 Origin 2 Definition 3 Usage 4 Intercultural Health 5 Reception 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksOrigin editInterculturalism has arisen in response to criticisms of existing policies of multiculturalism such as criticisms that such policies had failed to create inclusion of different cultures within society but instead have divided society by legitimizing segregated separate communities that have isolated themselves and accentuated their specificity 1 It is based on the recognition of both differences and similarities between cultures 4 It has addressed the risk of the creation of absolute relativism within postmodernity and in multiculturalism 4 Interculturalism has been used as a tool of Native American and indigenous rights activists to achieve rights and recognition 3 5 Definition editPhilosopher Martha Nussbaum in her work Cultivating Humanity describes interculturalism as involving the recognition of common human needs across cultures and of dissonance and critical dialogue within cultures and that interculturalists reject the claim of identity politics that only members of a particular group have the ability to understand the perspective of that group 6 Anthropologist Joanne Rappaport describes interculturalism as consisting of three main threads a method of connection a political philosophy aimed at creating utopian indigenous citizenship and a challenge to traditional ethnography 7 3 Rappaport discusses the importance of interculturalism in the Colombian Indigenous movement for human rights and recognition Usage editInterculturalism has been included in different national constitutions 8 9 10 across Latin America including Bolivia 11 Ecuador 2008 12 circular reference 13 Brazil and across Europe 14 Colombia includes the concept of multiculturalism 15 and pluriethnic citizenship in its 1991 constitution 16 3 The Ecuadorian constitution has been described as in between both multiculturalism and interculturalism 17 The United Nations agency UNESCO adopted the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in 2005 which declares support for interculturalism 18 In Germany all universities are required to have a section on intercultural competence in their social work programs that involves students being able to be open to listen and communicate with people of different cultural backgrounds have knowledge of the backgrounds of cultural groups knowledge of existing stereotypes and prejudices involving cultural groups and other criteria 4 Salman Cheema the Head of Marketing and Communications of the British Council in an article titled From Multiculturalism to Interculturalism A British perspective spoke of an event co hosted by the British Council and Canada s Institute for Research on Public Policy IRPP in Montreal Quebec Canada on April 11 2013 interculturalist advocate Phil Wood declared that multiculturalism has faced serious problems that need to be resolved through interculturalism and rejected those opponents of multiculturalism who seek to restore a pre multiculturalist monoculturalist society 19 Several days later in Montreal the New Democratic Party of Canada NDP declared support for interculturalism in the preamble of its constitution adopted its federal convention held in Montreal on April 14 2013 20 Intercultural Health editIntercultural health applies the concepts of interculturalism to health settings It involves conceptualizing health itself as part of a broader cultural framework Intercultural health defines what counts as health as outside purely biomedicine In many cases intercultural health is an approach that seeks to reduce gaps between indigenous health and biomedical health systems Indigenous health systems sometimes grouped in with alternative medicine often involve different kinds of healers plant medicine techniques holistic medicine and indigenous knowledge that has been passed down through generations Intercultural health systems often state the goal of creating better health outcomes in indigenous communities and generating mutual respect between biomedical practitioners and indigenous healers 21 The implementation of intercultural health practices is associated with the project of decentralizing health systems especially in Latin America 22 23 Ecuadorian epidemiologist and physician Jaime Breilh is a proponent of intercultural health for its benefits on population health 24 Structural violence a term developed by American medical anthropologist and physician Paul Farmer describes a lack of available health care as a form of violence 25 Supporters of intercultural health care models cite addressing structural violence as a goal 26 The goal of many intercultural health models is to treat indigenous knowledge with the same respect as biomedicine Intercultural health models have been associated with improved health outcomes in indigenous communities 27 26 28 29 Effective intercultural health projects involve buy in from all cultures represented 30 Anthropologist Catherine Walsh describes the concept of critical interculturality She defines this as using indigenous concepts to question the existing structure and advance epistemic change 31 30 This type of change requires what anthropologist Linda Tuhiwai Smith calls decolonizing methodologies which call for a reconsideration of what counts as knowledge 32 There are examples of intercultural health projects that do not fully incorporate indigenous methodologies and instead continue to perpetuate the western hegemonic order 33 Intercultural health projects often involve connecting traditional medicine or ancestral medicine or indigenous medicine with western biomedicine A series of case studies highlight intercultural health projects that integrate biomedicine with traditional medicine in Chile 33 Ecuador 33 Bolivia 21 Colombia 33 Guatemala 33 Suriname 33 and Ghana 34 Intercultural health education is a priority at the medical school in the Universidad Andina Simon Bolivar in Quito Ecuador 35 Intercultural education models have been built into schools in many indigenous communities across the Americas with the goal of passing down aspects of the particular indigenous practices and culture 36 These are often focused on language acquisition 37 Peru and Ecuador have both implemented intercultural indigenous language acquisition programs 38 Intercultural health concepts applied in United States biomedical settings are often called cultural competency 39 The explanatory model the original framework of cultural competency was developed by Arthur Kleinman It is a technique grounded in a set of questions that providers can use to understand how a patient understands their own illness This model has been applied in many US medical schools 40 41 Intercultural health projects are seen as distinct from culturally competent ones because of their goal in achieving indigenous political rights and reframing knowledge bases to include indigenous concepts One of the criticisms of the cultural competency model is that it can create biases among health providers who might begin to treat patients differently because of their cultural background without allowing for heterogeneity within a cultural group 42 It can also lead to worse health outcomes in minority groups when health care providers make assumptions about patients health behaviors and histories based on their race ethnicity or culture 42 The concept of witnessing was developed by Ellen Davenport as a way to overcome cultural competency stereotyping 43 Reception editInterculturalism has both supporters and opponents amongst people who endorse multiculturalism 1 Gerald Delanty views interculturalism as capable of incorporating multiculturalism within it 44 Ali Rattansi in his book Multiculturalism A Very Short Introduction 2011 argues that Interculturalism offers a more fruitful way than conventional multiculturalism for different ethnic groups to co exist in an atmosphere that encourages both better inter ethnic understanding and civility he provides useful examples of how interculturalist projects in the UK have shown in practice a constructive way forward for promoting multi ethnic civility Based on a considerable body of research he also sets out the outlines of a new interpretation of global history which shows that concepts of tolerance are not restricted to the West and that what is usually regarded as a unique Western cultural achievement should more appropriately be regarded as a Eurasian achievement He thus offers a more interculturalist view of global history which undermines notions of a clash of civilisations citation needed In contrast Nussbaum views interculturalism as distinct from multiculturalism and notes that several humanities professors have preferred interculturalism over multiculturalism because they view multiculturalism as being associated with relativism and identity politics 6 The extent to which the principles of intercultural health are protected in practice under the Ecuadorian constitution are questioned by academics 45 Some argue that interculturalism creates a binary whereas pluriculturalism is more inclusive alternative 46 See also editThe Contact Zone theoretical concept Cosmopolitanism Criticism of multiculturalism Cross cultural Cross cultural competence Cultural agility Intercultural communication Intercultural competence Intercultural Universities in Mexico Toleration Transculturation Social Medicine Foucault s Clinical Gaze Critical Epidemiology 47 References edit a b c John Nagle Multiculturalism s Double Bind Creating Inclusivity Cosmopolitanism and Difference Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2009 P 169 Ibanez B Penas Ma Carmen Lopez Saenz Interculturalism Between Identity and Diversity Bern Peter Lang AG 2006 P 15 a b c d Rappaport Joanne 20 September 2005 Intercultural Utopias Public Intellectuals Cultural Experimentation and Ethnic Pluralism in Colombia Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 8743 5 OCLC 1235889580 a b c Hans van Ewijk European Social Policy and Social Work Citizenship Based Social Work Oxon England UK New York New York USA Routledge 2010 P 136 Lopez Luis Enrique 1991 Educacion bilinque en Puno Peru Hacia un ajuste de cuentas Lima FOMCIENCIAS pp 173 217 a b Femi James Kolapo Immigrant Academics and Cultural Challenges in a Global Environment Amherst New York USA Cambria Press 2008 P 134 Ethnography Wikipedia 2022 04 14 retrieved 2022 04 19 Tironi Ernesto 2011 11 11 Las estrategias nacionales de desarrollo y la integracion de los paises andinos Estudios Internacionales 9 34 doi 10 5354 0719 3769 1976 17186 ISSN 0719 3769 Interculturality and Decoloniality On Decoloniality Duke University Press pp 57 80 2018 doi 10 1215 9780822371779 004 ISBN 978 0 8223 7177 9 retrieved 2022 05 07 Schavelzon Salvador Autor a El nacimiento del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia etnografia de una Asamblea Constituyente OCLC 1029746143 Constitution of Bolivia Wikipedia 2022 03 28 retrieved 2022 04 11 2008 Constitution of Ecuador Wikipedia en wikipedia org Retrieved 2022 04 11 Santos Boaventura de Sousa 2013 Justicia indigena plurinacionalidad e interculturalidad en Ecuador Abya Yala ISBN 978 9942 09 115 4 OCLC 876403478 Piciocchi Cinzia 2015 From strategies to Constitutions Identity Multiculturalism and Interculturalism as Legal values A Comparison between Europe and the Andean Countries Revista general de derecho publico comparado 17 Multiculturalism Wikipedia 2022 04 13 retrieved 2022 04 19 Colombian Constitution of 1991 Wikipedia 2022 01 25 retrieved 2022 04 19 Huayamave German Gerson 2017 06 06 La Constitucion ecuatoriana entre el multiculturalismo y la interculturalidad Un analisis de su orientacion INNOVA Research Journal in Spanish 2 6 22 34 doi 10 33890 innova v2 n6 2017 182 ISSN 2477 9024 UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions Article 4 Paragraph 8 http www britishcouncil ca our team Background on Salman Cheema NDP convention A new preamble is approved Macleans ca 14 April 2013 a b Torri Maria Costanza March 2012 Intercultural Health Practices Towards an Equal Recognition Between Indigenous Medicine and Biomedicine A Case Study from Chile Health Care Analysis 20 1 31 49 doi 10 1007 s10728 011 0170 3 ISSN 1065 3058 PMID 21404028 S2CID 22639060 Birn Anne Emanuelle Zimmerman Sarah Garfield Richard January 2000 To Decentralize or Not to Decentralize is That the Question Nicaraguan Health Policy under Structural Adjustment in the 1990s International Journal of Health Services 30 1 111 128 doi 10 2190 C6TB B16Y 60HV M3QW ISSN 0020 7314 PMID 10707302 S2CID 1189417 Bossert Thomas Larranaga Osvaldo Ruiz Meir Fernando August 2000 Decentralization of health systems in Latin America Revista Panamericana de Salud Publica 8 1 2 84 92 doi 10 1590 S1020 49892000000700011 ISSN 1020 4989 PMID 11026777 Breilh Jaime New Method and Intercultural Awakening Beyond the Knowledge Illusion of the Cartesian Bubble Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 med 9780190492786 003 0004 ISBN 978 0 19 049281 6 Farmer Paul 1996 On Suffering and Structural Violence A View from Below Daedalus 125 1 261 283 ISSN 0011 5266 JSTOR 20027362 a b Spiegel Jerry M Breilh Jaime Yassi Annalee 2015 02 27 Why language matters insights and challenges in applying a social determination of health approach in a North South collaborative research program Globalization and Health 11 1 9 doi 10 1186 s12992 015 0091 2 ISSN 1744 8603 PMC 4353467 PMID 25880442 Breilh Jaime January 2021 Why Critical Epidemiology Critical Epidemiology and the People s Health Oxford University Press pp 47 132 doi 10 1093 med 9780190492786 003 0003 ISBN 978 0 19 049278 6 retrieved 2022 05 07 When people come first critical studies in global health Joao Guilherme Biehl Adriana Petryna Princeton Princeton University Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 4008 4680 1 OCLC 847525160 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Llamas Ana Mayhew Susannah December 2018 Five hundred years of medicine gone to waste Negotiating the implementation of an intercultural health policy in the Ecuadorian Andes BMC Public Health 18 1 686 doi 10 1186 s12889 018 5601 8 ISSN 1471 2458 PMC 5987654 PMID 29866186 a b Briggs Charles L 2016 Tell me why my children died rabies indigenous knowledge and communicative justice Clara Mantini Briggs Durham ISBN 978 0 8223 7439 8 OCLC 946055018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Walsh Catherine 2010 03 01 Development as Buen Vivir Institutional arrangements and de colonial entanglements Development 53 1 15 21 doi 10 1057 dev 2009 93 ISSN 1461 7072 S2CID 55952261 Smith Linda Tuhiwai 2021 Decolonizing methodologies research and indigenous peoples Third ed London ISBN 978 1 78699 812 5 OCLC 1242806586 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f Mignone Javier Bartlett Judith O Neil John Orchard Treena December 2007 Best practices in intercultural health five case studies in Latin America Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 3 1 31 doi 10 1186 1746 4269 3 31 ISSN 1746 4269 PMC 2000867 PMID 17803820 Peprah Prince Agyemang Duah Williams Arimiyaw Abdul Wahid Morgan Anthony Kwame Nachibi Stephen Uwumbordo January 2021 Removing barriers to healthcare through an intercultural healthcare system Focus group evidence Journal of Integrative Medicine 19 1 29 35 doi 10 1016 j joim 2020 08 008 PMID 33288486 S2CID 227947942 Universidad Andina Simon Bolivar Bienvenidos al nuevo portal Universidad Andina Simon Bolivar in Spanish Retrieved 2022 04 19 Aguirre Guadalupe Maria Vernimmen 2019 06 24 Educacion Intercultural Bilingue en Ecuador Una revision conceptual Alteridad in Spanish 14 2 162 171 doi 10 17163 alt v14n2 2019 01 ISSN 1390 8642 S2CID 198337526 Rousseau Stephanie Dargent Eduardo August 2019 The Construction of Indigenous Language Rights in Peru A Language Regime Approach Journal of Politics in Latin America 11 2 161 180 doi 10 1177 1866802X19866527 ISSN 1866 802X S2CID 201365188 Wroblewski Michael 2021 Remaking Kichwa language and indigenous pluralism in Amazonian Ecuador London ISBN 978 1 350 11556 9 OCLC 1227394760 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Cultural competence Wikipedia 2021 10 30 retrieved 2022 04 11 Dinos Sokratis Ascoli Micol Owiti John A Bhui Kamaldeep March 2017 Assessing explanatory models and health beliefs An essential but overlooked competency for clinicians BJPsych Advances 23 2 106 114 doi 10 1192 apt bp 114 013680 ISSN 2056 4678 S2CID 78421640 Fleckman Julia M Dal Corso Mark Ramirez Shokufeh Begalieva Maya Johnson Carolyn C 2015 Intercultural Competency in Public Health A Call for Action to Incorporate Training into Public Health Education Frontiers in Public Health 3 210 doi 10 3389 fpubh 2015 00210 ISSN 2296 2565 PMC 4556984 PMID 26389109 a b Holmes Seth M March 2012 The clinical gaze in the practice of migrant health Mexican migrants in the United States Social Science amp Medicine 74 6 873 881 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2011 06 067 PMID 21992736 S2CID 6939785 Davenport Beverly Ann 2000 Witnessing and the Medical Gaze How Medical Students Learn to See at a Free Clinic for the Homeless Medical Anthropology Quarterly 14 3 310 327 doi 10 1525 maq 2000 14 3 310 ISSN 0745 5194 JSTOR 649501 PMID 11036581 Gerald Delanty Community 2nd edition Routledge 2009 P 71 Gallegos Carlos Andres Waters William F Kuhlmann Anne Sebert 2016 12 18 Discourse vs practice are traditional practices and beliefs in pregnancy and childbirth included or excluded in the Ecuadorian health care system Table 1 International Health 9 2 105 111 doi 10 1093 inthealth ihw053 ISSN 1876 3413 PMID 27993953 Araujo Vanda 2018 MULTICULTURALISMO INTERCULTURALISMO E PLURICULTURALISMO DEBATES E HORIZONTES POLITICOS E EPISTEMOLoGICOS Revista mbienteeducacao 11 29 44 doi 10 26843 ae19828632v11n12018p29a44 Breilh Jaime 2019 Vallverdu Jordi Puyol Angel Estany Anna eds Critical Epidemiology in Latin America Roots Philosophical and Methodological Ruptures Philosophical and Methodological Debates in Public Health Cham Springer International Publishing pp 21 45 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 28626 2 3 ISBN 978 3 030 28625 5 S2CID 211461393 retrieved 2022 05 07Further reading editVerkuyten M Yogeeswaran K Mepham K Sprong S Interculturalism A new diversity ideology with interrelated components of dialogue unity and identity flexibility Eur J Soc Psychol 2020 50 505 519 https doi org 10 1002 ejsp 2628 Zapata Barrero R Interculturalism in the post multicultural debate a defence CMS 5 14 2017 https doi org 10 1186 s40878 017 0057 z Open secularism interculturalism the fight against discrimination and guidelines for accommodation Bouchard Taylor Commission https web archive org web 20080602000753 http www accommodements qc ca communiques 2008 05 22a en html Bouchard Gerard et al Interculturalism a model for integration in the Montreal Gazette March 2 2011 Bennett Milton J 1998 Basic Concepts of Intercultural Communication Intercultural Press Boston MA Kohls L Robert Knight John M 1994 Developing Intercultural Awareness Intercultural Press Boston MA Storti Craig 1994 Cross Cultural Dialogues Intercultural Press Boston MA External links edit nbsp Media related to Interculturalism at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interculturalism amp oldid 1219982497, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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