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"A lot more than painting!": [Re]Membering, [Re]Storying, and [Re]Claiming First Nations Women's Healing, Health, and Well-Being Post-Incarceration by Connecting the Mind, Body, and Heart through Body Mapping

dc.contributor.advisorGabel, Chelsea
dc.contributor.authorClifford, Alicia Gayle
dc.contributor.departmentHealth and Aging
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-24T19:21:14Z
dc.date.issued2026
dc.description.abstractDespite Canada's ongoing commitment to truth-telling and reconciliation, Indigenous women represent the fastest-growing demographic in Canadian prisons, even as overall incarceration rates decline. This dissertation, guided by an Indigenous research paradigm rooted in relational accountability, explored the impact of Okimaw Ohci Healing Lodge (OOHL), a state-run cultural prison in southern Saskatchewan, on the healing, health, and well-being of First Nations women from the Prairies. Conducted in partnership with the Elizabeth Fry Society of Saskatchewan, a non-profit organization serving women and gender-diverse adults who are criminalized or at risk of criminalization, the study employed a community arts-based method called body mapping. Through two 4-day workshops, eight First Nations women created life-sized body maps to communicate and process their experiences of colonialism, incarceration, and healing. Using inductive thematic analysis, these visual maps illuminated how Correctional Service Canada's cultural healing lodge influences healing, health, and well-being. The findings highlight collective themes of severed connections, somatic impacts, culture as healing, and the importance of relationships. Participants also offered recommendations that exposed gaps in programming, post-release supports, and tensions between OOHL's healing mission and its continued carceral regime. These insights reveal how correctional policy can either be an enabler or a barrier to First Nations women's healing. This dissertation contributes to critical criminology and Indigenous studies by demonstrating the value of body mapping as a research method and an evaluative tool to inform distinctions-based, culturally responsive approaches to carceral policy.
dc.description.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
dc.description.degreetypeDissertation
dc.description.sponsorshipSocial Sciences and Humanities Research Council
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11375/32868
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canadaen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/
dc.subjectFirst Nations Women
dc.subjectIndigenous Women
dc.subjectPrison Ecological Model
dc.subjectIndigenous methodologies
dc.subjectArts-based Methods
dc.subjectBody mapping
dc.subjectPrison
dc.subjectCultural Prison
dc.subjectIncarceration
dc.subjectCritical Criminology
dc.subjectSettler Colonialism
dc.subjectHealth and well being
dc.subjectHealing
dc.subjectEmbodiment
dc.subjectCommunity-Engaged Research
dc.title"A lot more than painting!": [Re]Membering, [Re]Storying, and [Re]Claiming First Nations Women's Healing, Health, and Well-Being Post-Incarceration by Connecting the Mind, Body, and Heart through Body Mapping
dc.title.alternative[Re]Claiming First Nations Women's Well-Being After Prison
dc.typeThesisen

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