Abstract
The academic literature on personal experiences of climate-induced wellbeing erosion (often conceptualised as ‘non-economic losses and damages’) is still limited. This represents a serious climate policy gap that hinders support for marginalised people across the world including Indigenous People. Lately, we have seen a rapid growth in empirical studies exploring linkages between climate change and mental health among Indigenous Inuit in Canada. However, its association with human (im)mobility remains unexplored. This review article brings together the empirical evidence of Inuit experiences and perceptions of climate-related wellbeing loss and (im)mobility while providing climate policy with guidance for appropriate action. The systematic review investigates how Inuit in Arctic Canada felt that climatic changes impacted their (im)mobility and mental health while putting these feelings into a wider context of colonial violence, forced child removal, the residential schools, and other systematic human rights abuses. Twelve electronic databases (four specific to Arctic research) were searched for English and French, peer reviewed, qualitative studies published between 2000 and 2021. Fifteen selected articles were analysed using NVivo and thematic narrative analysis from a climate-violence-health nexus systems approach. Three overarching climate-related wellbeing loss themes, all strongly intertwined with feelings of immobility, emerged from the literature namely ‘identity and cultural loss’, ‘land connection as a source of healing’, and ‘changing environment triggering emotional distress’. The narratives circled around Inuit land connection and how climate-induced temporary (im)mobility interrupted this relationship. Climatic changes isolated Inuit away from the land and cut off their ability to partake in land activities. This strongly eroded Inuit wellbeing, expressed through distress, anxiety, depression, social tension, suicide ideation and deep feelings of cultural loss. The findings showed how Inuit mental health strongly depend on a sustained connection to the land. Further empirical research among other Indigenous People or nomadic groups on wellbeing loss and climate-induced involuntary immobility is urgently needed. Future research should particularly explore how such mental health impacts tie into past and present (post)colonial traumas and current suicide occurrences. This will help climate policy, research, and adaptation planning better prepare and propose more contextually and culturally appropriate health actions in the future.
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Introduction: Understanding Inuit mental health in a changing climate from a climate-violence-health nexus systems approach
The Arctic region is one of the world’s hotspots for climate change (warming two to three times faster than the global annual average) and home to the Indigenous Inuit in Canada who live across ‘Inuit Nunangat’ or ‘Inuit homeland’Footnote 1 (Bunce et al., 2016; IPCC, 2018; Watts et al., 2021; Condon et al., 1995). Climate change may pose great health challenges upon people including impacts on mental health (Costello et al., 2009; Hayes et al., 2018; Manning and Clayton, 2018; RCPsych, 2021). Despite this, there is limited evidence on the extent of climate-related wellbeing consequences as most literature focuses on physical health (Fritze et al., 2008; Berry et al., 2010, 2018). Reviews emerging in the area of climate change and wellbeing include those on small island developing states (SIDS), those reporting insights from Bangladesh and Australia, or upon Indigenous populations globally (Kelman et al., 2021; McNamara et al., 2021; Hayward and Ayeb-Karlsson, 2021; Albrecht et al., 2007; Berry et al., 2010; Hueffer et al., 2019; Henrique et al., 2022; Middleton et al., 2020a). Recently, a growing number of empirical studies in the Arctic have begun to capture descriptions of climate-induced wellbeing or wellnessFootnote 2 erosion as perceived by the Inuit (Bourque and Cunsolo Willox, 2014; Robertson and Ljubicic, 2019; Hayward et al., 2020; Middleton et al., 2020b). No literature review compiling these insights in the context of human (im)mobility was however found. This review, analysing climate-related (im)mobility and wellbeing loss among Inuit in Canada, is therefore an important addition to the existing literature body.
Climatic changes in the Arctic range from temperature increases, thawing permafrost, reduced sea ice and snow, to sea level rise, coastal erosion, and storms, resulting in temporary immobility, land damages, relocation, and unsafe travelling on the melting ice (Ford et al., 2006; Prowse and Furgal, 2009; Chanteloup et al., 2018; IPCC, 2018). Environmental changes and climate-induced involuntary immobility, often referred to as ‘trapped’ populationsFootnote 3, have the potential to increase distress, anxiety and feelings of despair and hopelessness (Cunsolo and Ellis, 2018; Tschakert et al., 2019; Ayeb-Karlsson, 2021). Inuit report a decline in their ability to partake in land-based activities (e.g., hunting, foraging, trapping) and in their ability to visit culturally significant sites due to the climate-related immobility. This subsequently impairs intergenerational transfer of Indigenous Traditional Knowledge (ITK) (‘Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit’)Footnote 4 (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012; Ford, 2012).
Associating climate change to mental health impacts is complex and challenging for a variety of reasons such as lacking data, stigma and underreporting, or differences in health systems and subjective understandings of wellbeing (Berry et al., 2018; Hayward and Ayeb-Karlsson, 2021; Kelman et al., 2021). Historically, the existing research has focussed on extreme heat such as increased temperatures, heatwaves, humidity and the risk of psychological distress, violence, self-harm, and suicide (Berry et al., 2010, 2018; Hayes et al., 2018; Florido Ngu et al., 2021). Other literature streams investigating climate-induced mental health impacts include that of ‘ecological grief’ (Cunsolo and Ellis, 2018; Cunsolo et al., 2020), ‘solastalgia’ (Albrecht et al., 2007; Hayes et al., 2018) and ‘eco-anxiety’ (Hayes et al., 2018; Ojala et al., 2021), or eco-distress and eco-anger’ (Stanley et al., 2021). Meanwhile, within United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) policy circles, climate-induced wellbeing erosion is often conceptualised as climate-driven ‘Non-Economic Losses and Damages’ (Barnett et al., 2016; Cunsolo and Ellis, 2018; Tschakert et al., 2019; Ayeb-Karlsson, 2020a; McNamara et al., 2021; Henrique et al., 2022; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2023).
Inuit in Canada are reported to experience disproportionate levels of physical and mental health issues (Kral et al., 2011; Nelson and Wilson, 2017; Hayward et al., 2020). The prevailing intergenerational trauma from the harrowing ‘Indian’ Residential School (IRS) system must be recognised as a key contributing health risk factor (Harper et al., 2012; MacDonald and Hudson, 2012; Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b; Crawford, 2016; McQuaid et al., 2017). The IRS system in Canada (and beyond)Footnote 5 was a network of so-called residential or boarding ‘schools’ run primarily by the Catholic Church that are estimated to have forcefully removed more than 150,000 First Nation and Indigenous children in Canada from their families over their hundred years of existence (1876–1996). By the 1930s, 30% of children are thought to have been removed from their families, raising from 10% to 63% between 1951 and 1961 (Smith, 2004, 2008; Feir, 2016).
The system severely traumatised and harmed Indigenous People through the deprivation of a family life, language, identity, and traditions as the IRS system aimed to forcefully ‘assimilate’ them into ‘Canadian’ values which is why it in 2015 was deemed a ‘cultural genocide’ (or an ethnocide). The Canadian residential schools became hotspots for physical and sexual abuse, malnutrition, medical experiments, and other inhumane child mistreatment and neglect that further added to the intergenerational trauma. Children were beaten for speaking in their native language and serial rapists were left to roam free in the schools naturally resulting in the increased prevalence of post-traumatic stress, substance use and suicide (ideation) that until today persist among Indigenous People in Canada and across the world (Pollock et al., 2016, 2018; Crawford, 2016; McQuaid et al., 2017).
By 2001, 16,000 Indigenous People (17% of residential school attendants) had brought legal action against the Canadian Government or the Church. Reports indicate that up to 100% of children in some IRS were sexually abused and approximately 40% died before returning home or soon after returning as they were sent home in critical health conditions. The Canadian Government issued an official apology for the residential school abuses in the House of Common as part of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission work in 2008. Over 1300 unmarked graves were discovered around the IRS locations in 2021. The exact number of dead children remains unknown (Smith, 2008; MacDonald and Hudson, 2012). The bodies of the children were seldom returned to their parents who rarely even learnt of their child’s death or the circumstances related to their passing.Footnote 6
The IRS system must be understood as a form of state-led colonial and structural violence through forced assimilation, ‘adoptions’ and child removals that also can be observed among other Indigenous People in Commonwealth countries such as New Zeeland, Australia, Kenya, Malaysia, India and regions and countries beyond such as in the US, China, former USSR, Scandinavia, and the Middle East (Fournier and Crey, 1998; Kuokkanen, 2003; Smith, 2008; Swain, 2013; Reyhner, 2018). Other similar child removal systems include those of the so-called ‘Mother and Baby Homes’ or ‘Magdalene Laundries’ in Ireland and the UK in the context of unmarried mothers, also affiliated with the Catholic Church (Swain, 2013; Sinclair, 2016; Garrett, 2017). These structural child removal systems are in a way still active today as Indigenous and Black children are overrepresented in most ‘Out-of-Home’ care systems (Ramsay, 2016; O’Donnell et al., 2019). The practise of state-led child removal continues to leave a long trail of intergenerational trauma behind it and particularly among marginalised groups including Indigenous Inuit in Canada (Chase and Ullrich, 2022; Dalton et al., 2022).Footnote 7
It is important to make clear that the IRS system extended from Canadian day schools in many areas of the Arctic where Inuit families were coerced into coming from the land to send their children to school by withholding governmental benefits or even imprison parents in case they resisted the mandatory schooling (Tester and Irniq, 2008; Shackleton, 2012; Feir, 2016; Smith, 2004, 2008). However, building from racial ideologies in the US, the day school system was abandoned as it was seen as ‘insufficient’. A situation where children returned to see their families by the end of the day, lived close to, or visited them, was argued to ‘undo’ the assimilation work. First Nation and Indigenous children were therefore systematically removed permanently and moved far away from their family networks to break the social connections with their peers (Smith, 2008; Reyhner, 2018).
As a result of Inuit being forced to abandon their continuous connection to the land, the sled dog population collapsed due to the changes in movements, but also due to aggregation of the dogs including them being put down by the RCMP (Laugrand and Oosten, 2002; Shackleton, 2012; McHugh, 2013). The travel system, as well as an important part of Inuit identity, was replaced by snowmobiles which contributed to monetary dependence and a disruption to the ecosystem and environment including through sound, air, and snow pollution (Condon et al., 1995; Tester, 2010a, 2010b). Initially, hunters would earn money by selling seal skins, but this was rapidly put to an end by the European seal ban (Wenzel, 1987; Damas, 1988; Tester and Irniq, 2008).Footnote 8
The processes over the past century all contributed to the root problems of the current substance use among Inuit. The helplessness and immobility that hunters felt when they lost their dogs and their ability to hunt for seal are socio-political factors deeply interlinked with any potential climate-related wellbeing loss. Inuit immobility and wellbeing loss can clearly not be attributed to the environment alone (Cameron, 2012; Haalboom and Natcher, 2012; Pfeifer, 2020; Ready and Collings, 2021). This is why we choose to investigate Inuit climate-related immobility and its consequences through a systems approach that understands that any potential wellbeing losses are pathways in a wider climate-violence-health nexus of interrelated social, political, financial, historical, cultural, psychological, and environmental factors (Berry et al., 2010, 2018; Longman et al., 2019; Hayward and Ayeb-Karlsson, 2021; Orievulu et al., 2022; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2023). Exploring Inuit experiences of immobility in the context of climate change must be understood as influenced by long-term events and diverse factors. All these historical and contemporary complex processes, including the targeted colonial and structural violence, must be considered to appropriately appreciate Inuit experiences of immobility and wellbeing loss in the context of climate change.
The suicide rate among Inuit in the Nunavut region is one of the highest in the world, ten times higher than Canada’s average, and among young male Inuit (aged 15 to 29) it is a shocking 40 times greater (Pollock et al., 2016; Nelson and Wilson, 2017; Hayward et al., 2020). Higher than average suicide rates among Indigenous Peoples is a globally registered phenomenon tracing back to the structural violence and marginalisation of colonial and post-colonial dynamics (Gray et al., 2016; Pollock et al., 2018; McQuaid et al., 2017). This review will compile the existing empirical findings of climate-related wellbeing loss in the context of human (im)mobility as perceived by the Inuit in the Canadian Arctic. The review study clearly acknowledges that such wellbeing impacts are deeply rooted in an Indigenous historical and societal context. Climate-induced wellbeing stress is understood to exacerbate the existing network of other health risks (Berry et al., 2018; Ready and Collings, 2021; Hayward and Ayeb-Karlsson, 2021). These empirical insights will help inform contextually and culturally appropriate health actions, and guide UNFCCC climate policy on how to best avert, minimise and address climate-induced mental health loss among Indigenous People in Canada and beyond.
Methods and material
The ‘Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses’ (PRISMA) guided the review process (Moher et al., 2009; Thompson et al., 2018): (1) Rationale and objective, (2) Search strategy and eligibility criteria, (3) Data extraction and quality appraisal, (4) Data synthesis, and (5) Analysis and reporting of findings. Twelve electronic databases, including four specific to Arctic research, were systematically searched for English and French peer reviewed literature, in June 2018 and then again in July 2021 (see Fig. 1, Table 1). The databases were chosen to encompass broad coverage and representation of climate and mental health research. The searches included studies published between 2000 and 2021. The justification for the cut-off year relates to the peak of literature generated by the 2000 UNFCCC COP6 appearance and the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA). From the initial search result of 1367 publications, 678 were identified for screening and 71 articles and their reference lists were assessed in detail in hope to identify further eligible articles. In the end, 15 English peer reviewed journal articles published between 2009 and 2020 were selected in the final study sample (see Fig. 2, Table 2). The identified and screened French peer reviewed journal articles were excluded based on the exclusion criteria (see Table 1).
The exclusion of articles in other languages than English and French may be a study limitation. Relevant empirical insights could have been missed as publications in Inuktitut or Inuinnaqtun were not included. We also acknowledge that as with all secondary data analyses there may be researcher biases introduced with how the interviews were designed, conducted, or through the selection of data and analysis, that may be difficult for us to detect at this stage. The primary data studies selected for this review analysis offered the participants a choice to conduct the interviews in Inuktitut, Inuinnaqtun, or English. Most participants were reported to prefer conducting their interview in English rather than in Inuktitut or Inuinnaqtun and with an interpreter. This is possibly because most of the interviews were conducted in Nunatsiavut. All studies include ethical reflections regarding empirical conduction, triangulation, Inuit participatory research engagement and translation. Twelve articles explicitly stated having an approved research ethics license. All 15 articles were quality screened as ‘high’ using the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and CASP quality assessment tools (see Table 3).
Qualitative data (personal narratives, experiences, and perceptions) were prioritised over quantitative data as the analysis sought to study the values, perceptions and local understandings in the captured narratives surrounding climate change, human (im)mobility and mental health (Thomas and Harden, 2008; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2023; McMichael et al., 2023). Relevant quantitative studies were however incorporated into the study’s contextual setting and research background. In accordance with the exclusion criteria, non-Inuit qualitative responses and quantitative data, publications in languages other than English or French, and grey literature were omitted. As with all research designs, sampling and study selection may introduce risks of bias. It is important to acknowledge the unequal geographical distribution of the literature sample across the Inuit Nunangat region. Ten studies were conducted in the Nunatsiavut region while only three were from the Nunavut region and one each from Inuvialuit and Nunavik. The presented findings may therefore not be fully representative of all Inuit living in the Inuit Nunangat region as Nunatsiavut has a lower population than Nunavut.
We worked from a position of caution around our own potential researcher bias as well as the many ways that the sample study researchers’ positionalities may have influenced the qualitative and thematic narrative analysis. We followed a qualitative and discursive thematic narrative analysis where rather than identifying quantitative repetitions of codes, or words, we aimed to analyse the described values, narratives and perceptions associated with the thematic areas (Overcash, 2003; Popay et al., 2005; Guest et al., 2011; Bailey et al., 2017; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2018; Lee et al., 2020). This type of exploratory thematic narrative analysis is common within cultural, linguistic, storytelling, sociological, health and psychological studies that aim to analyse decision-making responses, behaviours, values, and meanings associated with collective descriptions of norms and codes of conduct (Hodge et al., 2002; Overcash, 2003; Leamy et al., 2011; Tschakert et al., 2019; Ayeb-Karlsson, 2020b, 2021; Ojala et al., 2021; Harasym et al., 2022).
On a practical level, we first conducted the narrative analysis separately by analysing the values and perceptions presented in the individual informant elaborations from the 15 articles (see supplementary material). Following the analytical steps of (1) individually developing a primary detailed thematic narrative synthesis, (2) individually exploring relationships within and between the narratives, and finally (3) collectively and externally assessing the robustness of the final thematic narrative synthesis (Popay et al., 2005; Thomas and Harden, 2008; Leamy et al., 2011). In this way, we conducted the initial analysis independently from one another during which approximately ten thematic areas and their interrelations to one another were identified.
A methodological approach of seeking to explore thematic narrative relationships and values within the extracted individual quotes, between quotes in the same study, as well as in between studies guided the analysis (Hodge et al., 2002; Overcash, 2003; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2018, 2023; Lee et al., 2020; Kelman et al., 2021; McMichael et al., 2023). We collectively discussed the separate thematic narrative synthesis findings and how we understood that the thematic areas interrelated. The smaller thematic areas were structured into the final three overarching narrative themes which robustness were further evaluated and incorporated with comments through external assessment.
The practical analytical steps involved the studies first being transferred in electronic form to the qualitative analysis software NVivo 12. Inductive ‘open coding’ was applied to the text of each study, allowing relevant and recurring narrative themes to be identified (Popay et al., 2005; Thomas and Harden, 2008; Lee et al., 2020). In the onset joint analytical conversations, approximately ten identified thematic narrative areas were discussed to avoid misrepresentation of their interrelations. The original identified thematic areas included, but were not limited to, traditional food, connection to land, identity creation, weather related impacts, traditional knowledge, healing strategies, coping, feelings of entrapment, perceptions of mobility and freedom, resilience, and adaptive capacity. No original thematic area was omitted from the results, but all structured into the three overarching thematic narratives. The result section presents the smaller narrative themes as interrelated within the three identified overarching narrative themes; (1) identity and cultural loss, (2) land connection as a source for healing, and (3) changing environment triggering emotional distress.
To avoid researcher bias, the manuscript draft was circulated for external feedback from scholars including Indigenous scholars and researchers currently carrying out empirical work in the study area. A final layer of transparency included that of incorporating as many text extracts as possible in the result section, and a further set of text extracts in the supplementary material, to exemplify the overarching final key thematic areas. Each presented narrative theme in the result section includes text extracts from three to four different articles. Further to this, the supplementary material transparently shows how additional text extracts from most studies feed into the three overarching narratives. All in all, over 80 text extracts are presented in the result section, while another 150 text extracts appear in the supplementary material.Footnote 9 This goes beyond the transparency of many similar qualitative studies which tend to limit their text extracts inclusion to approximately ten to fifteen quotes.
Thematic narrative analysis is an effective tool to detect contextual values, meaning and socio-cultural storylines. A narrative synthesis tends to be an appropriate approach to present findings that maintains the research participants’ storylines (Ali, 2013; Leamy et al., 2011). Qualitative interviews often allow interviewing space for participants to elaborate around local and subjective perceptions, values, and life experiences (Overcash, 2003; Ayeb-Karlsson, 2020b). Narrative approaches have also been embraced for their empowering aftereffects, particularly in the context of vulnerable and marginalised groups, as people get to voice their truth, in their own words, which humanises people who are often oppressed, stigmatised, and misrepresented (Hodge et al., 2002; Ali, 2013; Harasym et al., 2022). The method delicately helps us approach sensitive topics, experiences, and values that may have gotten pushed aside due to socio-normative boundaries (Tschakert et al., 2019; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2023).
Careful ethical considerations must be incorporated into all research relating to Indigenous People, ethnic minorities, and other marginalised populations. The review authors have experience working with and researching Indigenous and First Nation people globally and recognise the empowering element of ensuring space for research participants to voice their concerns and tell their own stories in their own words (Hodge et al., 2002; Harper et al., 2012; Harasym et al., 2022). Critical scholars have raised apprehension about how reviews and secondary data analysis may be misrepresentative as Indigenous People often do not engage in the analysis in the same way as with participatory empirical research.
All research is a fine balance between ensuring that data collection is inclusive, non-extractive and non-exhaustive to avoid unnecessary stress upon participants. We must acknowledge the value of reanalysing existing data rather than recreating the same data sets repeatedly with expectations upon research participants to continuously put time and livelihoods aside to engage with another study. In the context of climate change, migration and health in small island developing states (SIDS), the Pacific for example, has been identified as one such study area where people are experiencing research fatigue and reviews can help alleviate unnecessary research pressures (Kelman et al., 2021; McNamara et al., 2021). Other critical scholars have raised concerns about how separating, differentiating, and objectifying Indigenous research as ‘exotic’ and ‘distinct’ from other research in itself can be disempowering. Active attempts to decolonise Indigenous research may therefore end up feeding into the unhealthy post-colonial power relations that participatory research scholars were attempting to avoid first place (Haalboom and Natcher, 2012; Cameron, 2012; Wolf et al., 2013; Titz et al., 2018; Pfeifer, 2020; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2022).Footnote 10
The article is an attempt to enhance the further use of people’s local descriptions and narratives to better understand mental health impacts through more inclusive and representative tools within clinical psychology such as ‘Cultural Concepts of Distress’ (Overcash, 2003; Kral et al., 2011; Harasym et al., 2022). The identified storylines help us describe how Inuit felt and perceived climatic impacts and their interrelation with (im)mobility and wellbeing loss. Climatic changes are likely to affect them more disproportionately than, for example, a white wealthy middle-aged Canadian man, due to pre-existing health vulnerabilities and societal inequalities (Berry et al., 2018; Hayward and Ayeb-Karlsson, 2021). This narrative approach captures the nuances in wellbeing losses that may be difficult to identify, register and quantify in, for example, a survey questionnaire. These nuances are important as mental ill-health often builds on longer causal psychosocial relations. The hope is that similar study designs in the future can help inform climate change policy with locally led global experiences and solutions to non-economic wellbeing losses and damages.
Results
The narrative analysis revealed three overarching themes at the core of climate-related health loss and (im)mobility. The wellbeing loss as perceived by Inuit was strongly intertwined with climate-induced immobility and structured into; (1) identity and cultural loss, (2) land connection as a source of healing, and (3) environmentally-triggered emotional distress.
Identity and cultural loss
The factors linking climatic stress to wellbeing erosion through identity and cultural loss varied among the studies but overall fed into the connection to the land as a fundamental part of being Inuit:
/…/the land /…/ defines who we are [as Inuit]. It’s part of us. /…/we have this connection to the land that makes you feel good. It makes you, you (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:542).
/…/we are in our land and that the land means so much to us /…/ we are very connected to the land (Chanteloup et al., 2018:376).
If the land changes, then everything else will change. The land affects people just as much as the people affect the land (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2015:137).
/…/besides my family, I would die for my land (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:19).
Many described ‘being one with the land’, meaning that the climate-induced changes to the land were embodied as individual loss of Inuit culture and identity:
/…/ this is the beginning /…/ of what global warming is gonna do to us? /…/ the Inuit thrive on ice. I mean they’re people of the ice (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:20).
[unusual seasons] that to me is taking away our culture, it’s taking away our traditional lifestyle, it’s taking away our heritage, it’s nipping into who we are, ice people /…/ people of the snow (Wolf et al., 2013:557).
/…/the environment supports the culture that was strong and in order to get the culture stronger, we still need that [cold] weather (Harper et al., 2015:7).
/…/we’re winter people/…/ we’re people of the snow; we want the snow, we want the ice (Middleton et al., 2020b:5).
Adverse weather conditions, rain, storm, fog, lack of snow and thin sea ice were reported across the studies as constraining elements to spending time on the land and partaking in traditional practices such as hunting, trapping, foraging, and fishing. The relationship between climate-induced involuntary immobility (or ‘trapped’ populations) and wellbeing loss is an upcoming research area among climate change and human (im)mobility scholars (Ayeb-Karlsson, 2020a, 2021; Kelman et al., 2021; McNamara et al., 2021; Harasym et al., 2022; McMichael et al., 2023). The lack of snow and weak sea ice, that otherwise facilitated travelling to the cabins and land-based activities, immobilised Inuit and induced strong emotions such as feeling ‘handicapped’ or as having an ‘arm cut off’. The immobility severely impacted people’s mental health as it resulted in the loss of engagement with land-based or traditional practices that are fundamental to Inuit identity:
[not going out on the land] feels almost like a handicap (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:20).
/…/for the Inuit, going out on the land is just as much a part of our life as breathing. Really, we are so close to the land. We are land people. So if we don’t get out then, for our mental well-being, it’s like taking part of your arm away (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:261).
It’s my identity and it’s land based activity what keeps me grounded (Wolf et al., 2013:555).
/…/ it helps me stay balanced. /…/ people without the access/…/they’re losing a key part of their culture that helps them to maintain balance and connection. Not just with each other, but with their environment and everything else (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:265).
It can be hard on your mental capabilities. It can be hard to keep your sanity when you can’t get out (Middleton et al., 2020b:6).
The identity loss that Inuit experienced from the immobility and inability to partake in land-based activities extended into a loss of pride and self-worth through the perceived unproductivity:
/…/that is my first thought [about climate change] /…/ look at what has happened with people losing that sense of identify and pride and people feel proud of bringing that fish home and that caribou home and they share it with people (Harper et al., 2015:11).
Seal was considered to be the main (before caribou) source of food. They sustain my people so that they can live up there (as a cow does for you, white people). We only take what we need, and leave the others in peace /…/. To be considered as a good hunter, a man needs to hunt one of every animal (Chanteloup et al., 2018:370).
These narratives included current climate-induced losses as well as anticipated cultural, social and identity losses in the future:
/…/a common denominator of outdoor-based activities, cultural based activities, it’s sort of somewhat fragmented [because of climate change]. The cohesiveness that now bonds the community could be jeopardised because what else are you bonding on? (Harper et al., 2015:12)
I can’t imagine not being Inuit/…/if I wasn’t Inuit what am I? Like you belongs with them /…/when you does your cultural things like going out to the cabin and hunting and stuff it makes you feel more Inuit and you feels like you belongs (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2013:366).
it feels like everyone’s going to lose their culture/…/and I really don’t want that to happen (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2013:365).
I guess it’s all the pieces, like dominoes, all touches each other. I mean everything you do, [our] Inuit way of life and our way of thinking is all intertwined and interconnected [to the environment]. So, something as significant as changes in the temperature, and in snow and rain and that kind of thing, it’s all going to have a ripple effect (Harper et al., 2015:6).
The climate-induced constraints to land-based activities and the changes in the environment also implied losses of food and changes in Inuit diet that strongly shaped Inuit identity. The inability to hunt and gather ‘native’, ‘land’ or ‘Inuit food’ implied an identity loss:
Your cultural identity [is partly] what you eat /…/when you stop eating the land foods /…/ I mean, part of identifying with being Inuit is eating what I call ‘Inuit food’ (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:17).
The conditions were horrible. People didn’t get what they normally get for caribou and then you rely on store food junk/…/the foods sources that you usually get to, you can’t reach. There is not enough snow, there is not enough ice. It’s alarming that we are just seeing the beginning of climate change (Harper et al., 2015:10).
The loss of ‘Inuit food’ also came with cascading losses of cultural traditions such as not being able to share food, or not being able to eat specific ‘country food’ that would energise body and spirit:
/…/community is all about, sharing. /…/when they catch something they share it /…/ bring food to elders and people who can’t get out /…/people share, with their family or the elders (Pearce et al., 2010:166).
/…/within climate change, there’s all these other things changing – lifestyles changing, your food, your diet’s changing, the way you interact with people (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2015:137).
Well, I mean you’re not getting so much berries or hunts/…/ It’s the loss of food, loss of the way we live (Wolf et al., 2013:557).
if we got good sea ice we can go and get the proper wild [food] /…/ like fish, you can go fishing, or caribou hunting, go seal hunting, get partridges, get your geese, your ducks, your eggs. /…/ I love that food /…/and it’s also good for your body and your spirit (Durkalec et al., 2015:23).
When people want to travel and weather patterns change/…/ it affects their emotions, their mentality. They live on country food. It is good for their soul (Pearce et al., 2010:167).
Seals are very skinny through the spring, they are pitiful /…/ we can’t eat them/…/They are only good for dog food (Pearce et al., 2010:164).
/…/we have a lot of native food and once you don’t have a certain type of food, it’s like you’re always hungry even though you eat, and once you finally have that certain type of food it’s like your body is satisfied/…/ I could see that happening more and more in the future if the weather keeps changing/…/ I could see us craving for more and more native food (Pearce et al., 2010:167).
Land-based activities and food traditions also upheld cultural identity through the transfer of ITK. This intergenerational transfer of knowledge and wisdom depended on Inuit mobility, safe sea ice, and snow-filled accessible land. The sourcing and consumption of country foods to Inuit identity, unity, satisfaction, and preservation of culture strongly influenced the narratives. Climate-induced food insecurity thus eroded people’s mental health (Beaumier et al., 2015; Rosol et al., 2016; Robertson and Ljubicic, 2019). The constrained trapping and fishing, hunting healthy and desirable species, gathering berries that were disappearing, or the interruption of historical practices and food sharing, fragmented social cohesion, and collective wellbeing (Pearce et al., 2010: Wolf et al., 2013; Bunce et al., 2016). These are clear examples of what has been described in climate policy circles as ‘non-economic losses and damages’ or losses that cannot be measured in monetary terms (Cunsolo and Ellis, 2018; McNamara et al., 2021; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2023). To further explore the relationship between the environment and Inuit wellbeing, we continue to the thematic area of the land as a source of healing and health.
Land connection as a source of healing
The narratives expanded further on Inuit connection to the land, and the erosion of Inuit cultural identity through climate-induced immobility and interrupted access to the land. The land served as a healing, therapeutic and protective source for Inuit wellbeing. It was a source for health and wellbeing, seen as medicine, or as fundamental to Inuit life as oxygen:
/…/going on the land/…/is the healthiest thing you’ll ever get. /…/That’s where your health is, out there (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:543).
This is where I used to go to breath and hear myself (Chanteloup et al., 2018:371).
/…/we take great pride in being able to go on the land and just feel that energy when you get out on the land. For some people, it’s just like taking medicine (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:261).
You have to know what the land does to a person, /…/it just gives you that sense of freedom, identity. /…/it’s the best therapy that anybody could have in the world (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:18).
/…/for some people going out on the land is just as good as sitting down in a counselling session, no need for words/…/the air and the land takes a lot of your feelings away and replaces the negative energy with the positive energy, nature (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:262).
[the land] provides you with a sense of capability and/…/peace within yourself/…/you are probably better able to deal with things that are troubling you/…/you are able to come to some conclusion with yourself, because you feel in a better place to do that. If you take away that peace and that capability and that sense of self-value, then those [troubling] things seem to be more to the forefront (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:20).
Sea ice, cold temperature and snow were central to the healing experiences of being out and engaging with the land. The psychological, emotional, and spiritual benefits of being outdoors and tending to land-based activities were described as fulfilling and refreshing the spirit and unifying Inuit physical and mental health:
You’re so at the mercy of the elements that you appreciate those elements/…/so when the first snowfall comes/…/and the snowflakes are falling on your face/…/you’ll stop and enjoy that/…/you really feel like you’re so attuned like you feel closer to the land/.…/they are really small moments, but they add to your mental health (Middleton et al., 2020b:6).
I can practice my traditional lifestyle, that I can live healthy/…/that I can use the land to refresh me. /…/We use the land to replenish our spirit/…/to go out there and get rid of all the stress (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:543).
We know that hunting and fishing is one the best means of being healthy, and going out on the land /…/The old people always said that your body has to continually move all the time/…/Your body and your muscles and your blood have to constantly move, that’s the only way you’ll be healthy (Robertson and Ljubicic, 2019:552).
For some reason, we just need to be out on the land. /…/the more I am learning in mental health and wellness/…/the more I understand that I think it has a lot to do with the energy that you feel when you are outdoors, when you are out on land (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:261).
I don’t see anything positive about it [climatic change] here. It is meant to be cold, and snowy, and icy, and crisp, and fresh, and bright here. For the most part, that’s what is natural and normal here. And that is what people expect and love about this weather here, that is why [Inuit] stay here–it is in their bones and in their blood (Harper et al., 2015:6).
Time spent on the land was described as healing, as a progressive way of dealing with stress and coping with social frustrations and difficulties, similar to the way that people tend to religion, meditation, and faith:
Being out on the land/…/it gives me some form of peace with myself. /…/that’s where I feel mostly connected/…/I’m not a church-going person/…/but it’s there that I can find the peace that I need so it brings me comfort (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:19).
/…/when I was standing there, I used to hear my voice coming back to me. It was as if it was talking to me. /…/It was a good healing place for me (Chanteloup et al., 2018:372).
I think it does a lot for my health because it means I can get away from the everyday things that’s going on here/…/get away by myself and meditate/…/When you’re going out on a snow machine, your mind is not worried about what’s happening in town or who’s going to kill themselves/…/There’s no phone and there’s nobody bugging you (Durkalec et al., 2015:22).
[the land] can help you. It can soothe you and help you take things off your mind. You can go off wooding /…/take your frustrations out on a junk of wood. Or you can go out hunting and fishing/…/I would rather be out on the land any day rather than being in the community. It makes me feel as good as I ever feel (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2015:136).
The land was narrated as synonymous to freedom: as in being able to independently spend time outdoors and having the knowledge to live on and off the land without relying on others (Ostapchuk et al., 2012; Wolf et al., 2013; Durkalec et al., 2015). Many drew associations between feeling immobile and the lack of freedom or social dependence. Ultimately, ending up trapped and involuntary immobile in town brought up intergenerational traumas from the residential schools and the forced ‘assimilation’:
/…/when people are unable to spend time on the land, they have more time to dwell on the negative, to remember things like residential schools experiences when they felt really trapped and unable to leave. Those kinds of feelings certainly come back, or that’s what I’ve been told by lots of people. So yeah, I have no doubt that if these [climate change] trends continue, there will certainly be a large impact on mental health (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:264).
/…/people feel less capable, less able to provide, and less healthy about themselves then those [assimilation] impacts will either come more to the forefront and have to be dealt with, or they may just be built upon (Harper et al., 2015:12).
/…/you lose a sense of well-being in the community/…/but when you go out on the land, you feel a sense of freedom and the worries/…/seem to disappear/…/knowing that your children have a freedom being out on the land/…/you feel a sense of/….the healing, mentally/…/life is more calm because you are not worrying about anybody (Robertson and Ljubicic, 2019:553).
The freedom experienced out on the land was associated with ‘Ippigusutsianik’, referring to ‘consciousness of surroundings’Footnote 11 and being prepared for all outcomes (Healey et al., 2011; Harper et al., 2015; Durkalec et al., 2015). However, the climatic changes also introduce new and unfamiliar risks that created concerns, fear and anxiety about being out on the land. People reflected upon near miss accidents or people having died after falling through the ice:
There is a lot of change. /…/years ago/…/you could pretty much tell when [the ice] was going to /…/break-up in the spring/…/and freeze-up in the fall. /…/but it seems like you can’t do that anymore (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:11).
/…/when I was younger, the sea ice was safer, it was not in the condition that it is today (Durkalec et al., 2015:23).
/…/suddenly the places that you can go for generations in the past, you can’t because the snow has melted or the ice is melting, or they get caught somewhere. /…/someone might have to go and search for people that are missing (Harper et al., 2015:8).
Nobody wants to beat their machines up to go get some caribou. There is no snow covering the rocks. Some people like sink in the skidoo. It is dangerous (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2013:365).
It affects everyone because you can’t travel like you could before. It affects you in that way. You don’t know if the ice is going to be safe anymore (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:16).
Every conversation was around the ice was thin, it was unsafe to go, then they added some worry to that because people were still craving to get out on their skidoos on thin ice, with people going through the ice, and then there were family members that was off and didn’t come back. So, a lot of extra anxiety and disappointment, and unfulfilled needs (Harper et al., 2015:12).
The strong connection that Inuit have with the land can be understood as an emotional hypersensitivity around the ecological- and environmental changes felt by the land. In many ways, these narratives of upset, further analysed in the upcoming section that explores the distress that the environmental changes triggered, are delicate empirical witness statements of solastalgia, eco-anxiety and ecological grief e.g., distress, anxiety and grief relating to environmentally-induced losses and changes of beloved places or ecosystems (Albrecht et al., 2007; Hayes et al., 2018; Cunsolo et al., 2020; Stanley et al., 2021; Ojala et al., 2021).
Changing environment triggering emotional distress
The climate-associated immobility and collective confinement were reported to increase societal and domestic stress. Erosive coping strategies such as alcohol and drug use or gambling were captured in the narratives:
When we used to go out in boat from morning to night, there was no drinking, but as soon as you get back to [town], you started drinking. /…/we don’t take beer out there (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2015:136).
I mean you are stuck here on this point of land in the community and you want to get out and you cannot go. People get bored and people turn to drinking and drugging and social problems. /…/I mean people, day after day after day look out the window and it’s this old depressing fog and rain and windy. I mean it got to play on people’s minds (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:543).
People get bored and/…/turn to drinking and drugging and social problems/…/(Ostapchuk et al., 2012:17).
That’s what everyone who’s drinking says – they drink ‘cause there’s nothing else to do /…/One of my friends always says that he smokes dope so that the day don’t seem so long (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2015:138).
Right now there is so much drug and alcohol problems/…/ [It is] probably the biggest problem that we have/…/kids [are] going hungry because their parents spend their money on drugs and alcohol, there are more fights, more stress in families (Pearce et al., 2010:169).
People felt that the changing environment and the loss of snow and ice impacted their wellbeing through the constrained mobility and freedom. The inaccessible land instigated boredom, sadness, and isolation, all attributed to descriptions of feeling ‘trapped’, ‘stuck’ or ‘imprisoned’ similar to a ‘caged animal’:
/…/this year we were very isolated, I mean we’re an isolated community but this year was just like living on an island (Wolf et al., 2013:557).
Everything was about the weather. /…/how awful this was/…/It was always conversations about the weather and not being able to go out. /…/It really consumed us (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:20).
You’ll probably see more people being stressed. /…/If you can’t go out and everyone is kind of just stuck here, after a while I think it’s going to kind of get to people (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:17).
It’s just tiring, it’s really tiring waiting for snow when it’s not coming, or a freeze-up when it’s really long to wait for (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2013:366).
[the changes] will have the impact maybe on mental health, because it’s a depressing feeling when you’re stuck (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:543).
This entrapment triggered collective feelings of self-pity, powerlessness, and reduced self-worth where women in particular reported feeling depressed:
I think that [the changes] will have the impact maybe on mental health, because it’s a depressing feeling when you’re stuck. /…/part of your life is gone, and I think that’s very depressing. It could be a depressing thing for a lot of people, and it could have an impact on your health (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:543).
/…/every day [last winter] you get up and look out at the thermometer /…/it would rain and day after day, it was, it really was depressing. /…/you just sit and dwell/…/it can really affect you (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:20).
Changes in weather hurts people because they feel helpless about something they care about, which makes them feel sad (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2015:137).
It kind of depresses me sometimes/.…/ There’s times when you want to go off [on the land] (Middleton et al., 2020b:6).
I mean people, day after day after day look out the window and it’s this old, depressing fog and rain and wind. I mean it’s got to play on people’s minds (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:17).
Part of the helplessness was reminiscent of the powerlessness Inuit felt in relation to the ethnocide and the state-led child removals with the residential schools. People explained how the immobility, unproductiveness and dependency on a ‘Southern’ lifestyle amplified difficult memories and emotional trauma:
I think the trauma of being forced to assimilate/…/will be felt further if climate change affects [land] activity/…/some of those effects will seem to be a bit stronger to you and then the southern dependency needs to be more so (Harper et al., 2015:12).
A lot of trauma that you face-whether it be rape or residential schools or child abuse/…/usually if you are able to find some sense of worth in yourself and value you are able to start unconsciously healing from those wounds. /…/If you take away an internal capability and what makes you feel productive, then those tragedies or that past is still there/…/magnified because they come more to the surface/…/people feel less capable, less able to provide, and less healthy/…/those impacts will either come more to the forefront/…/be dealt with or they may just be built upon. /…/those [IRS] effects will be felt further if climate change affects [land] activity (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:264).
/…/there’s definitely depression [due to the changes], and you know a lot of things come about when everything that you know is taken away from you. /…/you’re in no place to control that yourself/…/you’re going to feel very helpless (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:543).
The emotional distress of living with a changing home-environment and the constraints it posed on people’s mobility, identity and culture were identified as cumulative risks for suicide ideation and fatal intentional self-harm. In particular, for those with distressing memories of IRS traumas and mental health conditions:
[periods of bad weather, fall freeze-up and spring thaw] are always the most vulnerable time in our communities for suicides, for violent statistics going up (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:263).
/…/teach the youth girls how to sew, or cook, or prepare/…/and the mens could learn how to make tools and go hunting/…/it could be a good way for the youth to understand that life is special/…/like way back when, they never really used to do that [suicide], and today it’s kinda hard (Robertson and Ljubicic, 2019:554-555).
/…/people tend to not drink at all when they’re out on the land /…/I think that certainly being stuck in the community, and the climate changes, impacts on the amount of alcohol consumed. And then it just snowballs from there into more violent incidents and spousal abuse and suicides (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013a:263).
Others described the interrupted land connection from lacking snow and ice as a constant reminder of the colonisation and Government imposed surveillance and control. When contemplating a future without sea ice, some felt as if they would ‘get sick’, ‘not be able to breathe’ or that their ‘appetite and mind would go’ (Durkalec et al., 2015; Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b). People explained how seeing their environment change was deeply upsetting, terrifying, and disorienting:
I’m scared that there’s not going to be any winter! I’m scared that you’re not going to be able to go to your cabins/…/ You can’t go trapping, like my dad will just lose that altogether. /…/it scares me that /…/you’re going to lose your culture even more (Wolf et al., 2013:557).
/…/as the time went on, I was just getting more frustrated/…/ You see [the changes] every day, and it’s not something that I could accept/…/ I’m very fearful of what this winter [2010–2011] is going to be (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:19).
[this past winter] everyone was always talking about the weather/…/everyone’s worried [about] next winter, wondering what it’ll be like/…/[When I go out on skidoo I wonder will I] go out on the bay on skidoo ever again for the rest of my life? Was that the last time? (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2013:367).
/…/people are starting to worry about/…/what’s going to happen in a few years down the road (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:18).
Others expressed being angry, mad, and anxious about a climate changed future and what it will mean to Inuit as a people and to their children:
/…/that’s so sad to think about it. It do make you angry, but what can you do? It makes you feel so helpless (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2012:543).
It kind of worries me how fast it is going to happen. Are my kids going to be able to go off to the cabin in the wintertime on skidoo? I love travelling on skidoo/…/It seems that might not happen when I get old. It seems like it is happening so fast (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2013:367).
/…/if I believe that it was going to get as drastic as they say I think I would go insane, even though I will not live that long to see it. But if I dwell on it (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013b:21).
/…/Our children will be stuck in the future, too. They are stuck with what we leave for them. /…/they will be stuck with our mess (Healey et al., 2011:93).
/…/when people think of the [Canadian] Inuit: snow and going hunting on the ice. That is not going to be anymore. Definitely, like the Inuit people and people who live in the North, that is their life. There is going to be big changes (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2013:366).
It’s going to change people’s lives. /…/you wouldn’t be able to trap, you wouldn’t be able to hunt, so it’s going to take away a part of your life (Wolf et al., 2013:558).
Despite the predominant feelings of grief, loss, and anxiety around the experienced and anticipated environmental changes of Inuit land, aligning with the conceptual understanding of eco-anxiety (Hayes et al., 2018; Stanley et al., 2021; Ojala et al., 2021) and ecological grief (Cunsolo and Ellis, 2018; Cunsolo et al., 2020) it is worth mentioning that some felt that Inuit would transform and adapt with the changes. They felt this way as they trusted that Inuit strength, determination, and resilience would guide them through the challenges:
/…/we have kind of like a reputation for being a people that can adjust to whatever happens. /…/whatever happens, we just learn to deal with it (Petrasek MacDonald et al., 2015:138).
If it keeps getting warmer, I guess we’re just going to have to adapt to the climate, because we have no plans of leaving (Ostapchuk et al., 2012:17).
I don’t know, I guess I might sell my skidoo, no point in having a skidoo down here if it’s going to be warm. Buy a four-wheeler, I suppose (Wolf et al., 2013:558).
This can also be noted in the ways that Inuit have adapted their mobility customs and means of transport from traditional ways of moving on the land with dog sleds, kayaks, and snowshoes to incorporating modern technology to support their movement with the use of snow machines, motorboats, or even considering the possibility of selling the skidoo to purchase a four-wheeler (Laugrand and Oosten, 2002; Tester, 2010a, 2010b). It can be seen as a way that Inuit described adapting with the climate conditions that offered increased mobility options while maintaining a feeling of being connected with the land once being out hunting on a skidoo or in a motorboat.
At the same time, other people associated these new modes of mobility with colonial traumas, such as the sled dog massacre (Shackleton, 2012; McHugh, 2013). People also described erosive elements of these coping mechanisms such as how the high fuel costs increased ‘Southern’ dependence through the need for cash, the use of fossil fuel, and the damage from the machines on the environment such as through ruts in the tundra, oil, and noise pollution. This kind of movements also reinforced a pattern of year-round village residence rather than seasonal camping on the land at outlying fishing and hunting camps (Wenzel, 1987; Damas, 1988; Tester and Irniq, 2008). Others fundamentally struggled to cope with the idea of change, were in denial, or explained remaining positive for the sake of their emotional wellbeing.
Discussion
It is interesting that climate-related immobility streamed through the empirical storylines as the search and review data extracted primarily focussed on understanding climate-induced wellbeing loss as perceived by Inuit. This should serve as key insights for the UNFCCC Loss and Damage work on human mobility and its close connections to non-economic losses and damages (NELs and NELDs). The human mobility and NELs expert groups are currently planned as separate work streams in the Executive Committee. Adding to that, insights of experienced losses and damages among immobile and trapped populations remain alarmingly scarce (McNamara et al., 2021; Jackson et al., 2023; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2022).
To the authors knowledge, very limited research has explored climate-induced immobility and wellbeing loss in the context of the Inuit in Canada (or other Indigenous People globally). It is crucial that open-ended and locally led storytelling empirical research in the future builds on and further explores the review’s findings. This is because we must acknowledge the limitations of this review study surrounding potential researcher bias and the research context in which the sample studies were conducted. The study designs primarily explored climate change impacts, adaptation measures and responses to climatic changes where mental health loss in some ways were found to be associated with Inuit (im)mobility. It will be important to learn more about how, why and to what level different Inuit individuals subjectively feel and self-identify as ‘trapped’ as well as to what extent such entrapment is perceived to be associated with the changing environment.
Climate-induced wellbeing loss in the sampled articles were narrated by the Inuit in Canada as longer pathways channelled through snow and ice dependant mobility, and as interlinked with interruptions in the land connection. These findings will be crucial to the understanding of various Indigenous People worldwide whose identity, cultural essence, and mental health are deeply interweaved with traditional customs, a nomadic life, or stable and noninterrupted connection with the land. Overall, wellbeing losses due to climate-induced immobility, or the links between involuntary experiences of feeling ‘trapped’ and climatic changes, represent research and policy areas that require further attention (Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2018, 2022, 2023; Gavonel et al., 2021; Cundill et al., 2021; Kelman et al., 2021; Tschakert and Neef, 2022; McMichael et al., 2023; Jackson et al., 2023).
The loss and decline of traditional food sources (such as seal, caribou, and berries) impacted Inuit mental health. The cultural, medicinal, and nutritional value of these food sources for Inuit wellness is well-reported (Takano, 2005; Beaumier et al., 2015; Rosol et al., 2016; Robertson and Ljubicic, 2019; Boulanger-Lapointe et al., 2019; Cunsolo et al., 2020; Borish et al., 2021). Climatic changes can contribute to shifts in animals’ migration routes or decline due diseases and competition for prey (Beaumier et al., 2015; Cunsolo et al., 2020). Subsistence data also demonstrate reduced harvests of seal and caribou, food insecurity as well as food adjustments to greater reliance on moose (Rosol et al., 2016; Borish et al., 2021). The change in food custom towards a greater mix of species must in some ways be understood as successful adaptive strategies around a fluctuating climate. At the same time, the food decline and unsafe ice also increased the risk of injuries and accidents for hunters who entered new hunting areas. Many felt stuck between the impossible choice of undesired immobility or precarious mobility on weak and dangerous ice that elevated fear and anxiety. However, the warmer temperatures also supported and improved marine and river travel or movements, hunting, and fishing from boats on rivers, lakes, and sea. Nonetheless, storms, floods, and unpredictable weather while out on the sea as well as seals and walrus moving further out with the moving ice packs posed new risks that served to immobilise those fearing injuries, accidents, and damage to their motorboats.
The interruption of a collective history, practise and traditions through the immobility and disrupted hunting, food gathering and sharing, severely impacted Inuit wellbeing (Wolf et al., 2013; Harper et al., 2015; Robertson and Ljubicic, 2019). The grief and loss expressed extended far beyond material losses. Inuit did not simply grieve the loss of caribou, seals, berries, declining ice, or even the hunting, food gathering and traditional practices. They grieved the anticipated losses and changes for future generations. In this way, the climate-induced non-economic losses and damages cascaded into extended mental health losses (Cunsolo and Ellis, 2018; Tschakert et al., 2019; Cunsolo et al., 2020; McNamara et al., 2021; Henrique et al., 2022; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2023).
The importance and feelings surrounding these anticipated non-economic losses and grief also need to be better channelled into the UNFCCC’s overall work on (Non-Economic) Loss and Damage. Research in the area of climate-induced non-economic losses and damages (NELs and NELDs) represents a key opportunity to appropriately avert, minimise and address climate-related mental health loss. We encourage the established ‘UNFCCC WIM ExCom Expert Group on Non-Economic Losses’ to support future research and financial investments around climate-related wellbeing loss and (im)mobility, particularly among Inuit and other Indigenous People globally.
The anticipated losses, uncertainties, and changes in collective Inuit wellbeing among future generations, triggered feelings of anxiety, distress, and anger. Some felt that the extensive discussions and the constant reminders of the changing weather and climate were upsetting. Erosive coping mechanisms (including substance use and gambling) sometimes constrained people’s ability to grieve, heal and adapt (Berry et al., 2018; Ayeb-Karlsson et al., 2023; Vergunst et al., 2023). This aligns with previous reports describing how Inuit with pre-existing social vulnerabilities are more susceptible to mental health issues including those that are climate-induced (Prowse and Furgal, 2009; Ford, 2009). The association between the trauma, powerlessness, control, and dependence related to the human rights abuses of the IRS system will have aggravated distress among people in regard to the climate uncertainty. It will be important to further investigate the diversity among pre-existing mental health conditions to find solutions to climate-induced wellbeing loss. The underreporting, stigmatisation and lacking access to healthcare services will pose challenges to these investigations.
Deterioration in Inuit wellbeing has been attributed to the cultural genocide and (post)colonisation resulting in the suppression of traditional Inuit lifestyles. The effects of historical (and current) mistreatment and discrimination remain. Inuit continue to experience intergenerational trauma. Many children who faced forced ‘adoptions’ remain unaware of their family ties and are kept up at night haunted by the residential school abuses; many parents who lost children still do not know what happened to them or whether they are even alive. These traumas continue to cause a breakdown in cultural identity, and a decline in ITK sharing. The many ways that Inuit have resisted and overcome decades of structural violence have also fostered a survivor identity that some felt will sustain them through any forthcoming climate-related wellbeing degradation. Inuit history increased their resilience, adaptive capacity, and determination to carry on and thrive, despite of the stress, changes, and challenges (Kral et al., 2011; Haalboom and Natcher, 2012; Bunce et al., 2016; Ready and Collings, 2021).
Recently, a growing literature body is investigating potential relations between increased temperatures, heat and humidity, and self-harm or suicide i.e., fatal intentional self-harm (Berry et al., 2010, 2018; Thompson et al., 2018; Watts et al., 2021; Florido Ngu et al., 2021). This represents another key area of examination going forward, keeping in mind the increased suicide risk globally among Indigenous People (Gray et al., 2016; Pollock et al., 2018; Middleton et al., 2020a). It raises immediate concerns as depressive thoughts and distress can spread rapidly from individuals to the extended collectives especially among immobile and isolated societies (Pollock et al., 2016; Crawford, 2016; McQuaid et al., 2017; Harasym et al., 2022). The isolation, immobility, hopelessness, and cascading wellbeing losses, described by the Inuit in this study, are all potential indicators for increased suicide ideation that will need further attention.
Conclusion
The key findings of this Inuit climate-related wellbeing loss review are valuable for broader UNFCCC climate policy, academia, and adaptation planning. However, more research on how Indigenous People worldwide perceive climate-induced immobility and wellbeing loss is needed. Inuit land acts as a protective factor for physical and mental health in a way that even temporary disruption in the mobility and land connection had devastating wellbeing impacts on people. Displacement and migration have until date served as main research areas bridging climate change-related human mobility and health. Conceptually, a person cannot be displaced at home. Nonetheless, the grief, anxiety and distress felt about the changing home-environment, and the immobility it caused, may in similar ways to displacement erode people’s wellbeing. We call for more research and for a greater policy focus on the climate-violence-health nexus of Indigenous immobile people. Considering the past and present traumas of Inuit due to (post)colonial and structural violence, the strong emotional ties of Inuit to the land, and its mechanisms for healing and therapy, it is likely that other Indigenous People, with similar traumatic life histories and whose identity is reproduced as part of the land, are also experiencing climate-related mental health impacts that will be felt even deeper over the coming years.
Data availability
The secondary data analysed in this study is openly available and has been published as peer reviewed journal articles.
Notes
Indigenous Inuit live across Canada, US Alaska, Chukotka (Russia) and Greenland, with approximately 65,000 of the 180,000 Circumpolar Inuit residing in Canada according to the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC). As of 2016, Inuit represented 65,025 of Canada’s total 36.29 million citizens, with 73% of Inuit in Canada living across ‘Inuit Nunangat’. 27% of Inuit are believed to live outside of this region (Boksa et al., 2015). The term ‘Inuit Nunangat’ (Inuit homeland) comprises Nunavik (Northern Quebec), Inuvialuit (North West Territories and Yukon), Nunatsiavut (Newfoundland and Labrador) and Nunavut. The Inuit Tapirit Kanatami’s understanding of ‘Inuit land’ includes references to ‘sea ice, oceanic, or terrestrial environments’ (Condon et al., 1995; Bunce et al., 2016).
In this article, we understand wellbeing ‘as a subjective and dynamic state of feeling healthy and happy that ties into life satisfaction and influences a person’s (or a collective’s) psychological and social function’ (Ayeb-Karlsson, 2020b:2). This acknowledges the social, cultural and subjective diversity and flexibility of wellbeing and mental health where we align Inuit mental wellness with the 2016 Inuit Tapirit Kanatami’s definition of ‘physical, emotional, mental and spiritual wellness, as well as strong cultural identity’ (Kral et al., 2011; Crawford, 2016). In this way, references to ‘mental health’ includes mental and emotional wellness, while mental health and wellbeing challenges also include erosive coping mechanisms and substance abuse (Hayes and Poland, 2018; Hueffer et al., 2019; Berry et al., 2018; Vergunst et al., 2023).
For literature reviews on the conceptual and discursive development of ‘trapped’ populations, see Ayeb-Karlsson et al. 2018 and 2022.
In this article, we will use ITK as a synonym for ‘Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit’ (IQ) as we acknowledge that this is the term used to describe Inuit epistemology or the Indigenous knowledge of the Inuit.
The so-called ‘Indian’ Residential School system in Canada traces back to the colonial days and ideologies coming out of the Catholic Church such as values that extended from the United Kingdom’s perception of a hierarchical world order (also incorporated into the British Boarding School system). The Residential School system (or Boarding School system in the US) was put in place in several Commonwealth countries such as in Australia, New Zeeland, India, Malaysia, and Kenya, but also in other continents and countries (Kuokkanen, 2003; Smith, 2004, 2008; Swain, 2013; Feir, 2016; Reyhner, 2018). The thing that unified them all was the structural violence through forced assimilation of Indigenous People which preserved a racial class hierarchy elevating the white elite.
For further description of the abuse, torture and mistreatment of Indigenous and First Nations children in the Canadian residential schools see https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/canadas-residential-schools-were-a-horror/ and https://ottawacitizen.com/news/canada/how-canada-forgot-about-more-than-1308-graves-at-former-residential-schools/wcm/18d376d7-7abc-42b6-a459-d964dc7ca844.
For further illustrations related to the health and wellbeing impacts of forced adoption, child removals and family separation among Indigenous and First Nation children in Canada, see newly released TV Drama Series ‘Little Bird’ (2023) available at https://www.imdb.com/title/tt22750834/ and 'Bones of Crows’ (2023) available at https://www.imdb.com/title/tt21342838/.
For further illustrations related to the health and wellbeing impacts of Inuit in the context of seal hunting restrictions, bans and so-called animal rights activists, see ‘Angry Inuk’ (2016) available at https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5709536/ and elaborations on hunting, mental health loss and suicide ideation among Inuit youth in 'The Grizzlies' (2018) available at https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6365796.
For transparency, the 150+ text extracts included in the narrative sampling have been added to the supplementary material. This transparently showcases the overall quote balance between the three overarching themes and indicates the age and gender of each empirical interviewing text extract as well as the article in which it was originally presented.
We acknowledge the recent debate and agree that words such as ‘communities’ and ‘participatory’ research approaches, and more so when linked to Indigenous People (e.g., Indigenous communities), may reproduce misrepresentative romantic, classless and spiritual notions or stereotypes (Haalboom and Natcher, 2012; Cameron, 2012; Titz et al., 2018; Pfeifer, 2020; Ayeb-Karlsson, 2020b). However, as the word ‘community’ was brought up in the interviews by the participants alone we feel it is only fair to include it in this article.
We note that there are differences in Inuktitut dialects depending on location, so this may not be a consistent term across Inuit Nunangat.
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Acknowledgements
More than anything, we thank the Inuit participants who dedicated their time to the original empirical studies. We also thank our colleagues at BSMS, University of Sussex, UCL, UNU-EHS and the Indigenous scholars beyond these institutes who have contributed in various and important discussions to help improve the research. We respectfully acknowledge that the land on which this research was conducted is traditional territory, and we pay respect to the rich history and culture of Inuit people, and to their Elders, past and present.
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All authors took part in developing the conceptual and theoretical idea of the article with SAK leading on the systems understanding of a climate-violence-health nexus. All three authors supported the data collection and took active part in the data analysis and the drafting of the original manuscript. AH led the first data collection and article draft development under the guidance and active contribution of MLT and SAK. This manuscript draft was redeveloped through a second extended literature review and article revision that was led by SAK. MLT led the quality assessment with support from SAK. SAK led the revision work and incorporation of reviewer comments with support from MLT. Overall, SAK took the leading role in writing and reviewing the manuscript, but all authors contributed to the writing and actively engaged in critically shaping the final article.
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This secondary data study passed through the standard ethical approval process at Brighton and Sussex Medical School before the research began. This research did not directly involve human research participants. We have revised the ethical standards of each selected journal article involving human participants analysed as part of this study. The research was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.
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Ayeb-Karlsson, S., Hoad, A. & Trueba, M.L. ‘My appetite and mind would go’: Inuit perceptions of (im)mobility and wellbeing loss under climate change across Inuit Nunangat in the Canadian Arctic. Humanit Soc Sci Commun 11, 277 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-02706-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-02706-1
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