Alimenté par : Claudia (ADFI Alsace)
Cet outil s'appuie sur PubMind
PubMind est une plateforme collaborative de veille scientifique qui permet d'importer des publications depuis PubMed, de suivre leur avancement de lecture, d'en extraire les éléments méthodologiques clés (protocoles, variables, résultats) et de constituer une synthèse structurée afin de faciliter la réalisation de revues de littérature. Entièrement personnalisable, cet outil s'adapte aux thématiques de recherche de ses utilisateurs.
Nous l'avons configuré ici pour centraliser et analyser la littérature scientifique concernant les croyances, les traitements psychologiques, l'étude de la scrupulosité, ainsi que l'impact et la prise en charge des troubles liés aux dérives sectaires.
Dernière synchronisation le 05/06/2026
Discov Ment Health . 2025;6 (1) :8
This paper presents an embodied framework of Race-Based Traumatic Stress (RBTS) grounded in the lived experience of a Black African immigrant woman navigating structural racism, microaggressions, and cultural displacement in Canadian academic and professional spaces. Drawing on African feminist epistemologies, polyvagal theory, and African-centered decolonial thought, it conceptualizes RBTS as a culturally situated, embodied response to chronic racial harm. Through narrative reflection and Shona proverbs, the paper explores the emotional and physiological toll of racism while illuminating the protective role of cultural identity, ancestral wisdom, and community. The framework traces recursive phases of RBTS, beginning with migration hope and internalization, followed by overperformance, leadership challenges, inclusive exclusion, emotional labour, and psychological overload, and culminating in a reawakening through Black joy. This concept is introduced not as a fleeting emotion but as a radical, intentional, and culturally grounded practice of healing and resistance. It affirms Africentric knowledge, relational care, and collective affirmation as vital tools for reclaiming wellness. This contribution deepens global understandings of oppression-based trauma by centering embodied knowledge and advocating for culturally affirming mental health supports, community-led healing spaces, and systemic transformation.