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About the Project

Urban Indigenous Identity, Gender, and Wellness: Sharing Wisdom Across Generations (UIIGW) explored how land-based programming supports wellness among urban Indigenous youth by centring identity, gender, and intergenerational knowledge sharing. ​

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Running from 2022-2025, the project was co-led by Métis Community Services Society of BC, Lillooet Friendship Centre, Society, and university-based researchers at the University of British Columbia Okanagan. Together, this partnership formed the Urban Indigenous Youth Wellbeing Collective. 

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Together, the Collective co-developed five land-based programs for each centre, grounded in community priorities and local contexts. Activities included harvesting and preserving food and medicines, plant walks, Indigenous ceremonies, genealogy research, arts-based activities (such as beading, sash weaving, sewing ribbon skirts and shirts) and learning from Elders and Knowledge Keepers about gender, wellness, and identity.  

Project Governance

Youth were engaged as co-creators of programs, with guidance from local Community Advisory Teams and a cross-centre Youth & Young Adult Advisory Council. These governance structures ensured that community voices, cultural teachings, and intergenerational relationships guided every stage of the project. 

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Project Outcomes & Learnings

Over the course of the project, 105 youth, young adults, Elders, and knowledge keepers participated in UIIGW. Through sharing circles and surveys, youth described meaningful wellness impacts, including: 

A stronger sense of belonging

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Increased cultural pride

Deeper connection to community and land  

Greater understanding of their gender and identity 

These learnings continue to inform the Collective’s ongoing work to support urban Indigenous youth wellbeing. 

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Publications Coming Soon

Additional
Resources

These are downloadable resources developed through the UIIGW project (English): 

More Coming Soon

The Urban Indigenous Youth Wellbeing Collective gratefully acknowledges the UIIGW project was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. 

The Urban Indigenous Wellbeing Collective acknowledges that it works and gathers

on unceded, ancestral, and traditional territory of the Syilx Peoples. 

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