Assessing the Potential of Indigenous-Run Demographic/Health Surveys: the 2005 Shuar Survey, Ecuador

Despite improved national censuses and "microdemographic" studies, demographic processes and health conditions among indigenous populations in Amazonia and elsewhere in lowland Latin America are not well understood. A new source of demographic and health data has emerged in the past decade...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human Ecology 2011-10, Vol.39 (5), p.683-698
Hauptverfasser: Jokisch, Brad D., McSweeney, Kendra
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description Despite improved national censuses and "microdemographic" studies, demographic processes and health conditions among indigenous populations in Amazonia and elsewhere in lowland Latin America are not well understood. A new source of demographic and health data has emerged in the past decade, namely meso-scale surveys initiated and administered by indigenous organizations. These surveys offer the potential for filling information gaps, shedding light on culturally specific factors that shape demographic processes and health, and empowering indigenous organizations with data that could inform health initiatives. This article assesses the indigenous-run survey "2005 Health Analysis of the Shuar and Achuar Nations" of eastern Ecuador in which the authors were involved, which reached 1,943 households in 257 communities in Morona-Santiago Province. We present findings on fertility, migration, sanitation, and health, and assess the strengths and weaknesses of the survey. We argue that despite flaws in the survey design and implementation, this survey revealed important linkages among fertility, migration, and health. Such surveys have the potential to provide much needed detail, representativeness, and cultural specificity that macro and micro data sources cannot provide. We conclude with recommendations to improve surveys of this type.
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subjects Age
American Indians
Anthropology
Attitude surveys
census
Censuses
culture
Data
Data processing
Demographics
Demography
Ecuador
Environmental Management
Fertility
Fertility rates
Geography
Health
Health care policy
Health promotion
Health surveys
Households
Human ecology
Indigenous peoples
Indigenous Populations
Latin America
Mesoscale convective complexes
Migration
Organizations
Polls & surveys
Questionnaires
Sanitation
Social Sciences
Sociology
Survey design
Surveys
title Assessing the Potential of Indigenous-Run Demographic/Health Surveys: the 2005 Shuar Survey, Ecuador
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