COVID-19, Internal Transitions and Vulnerable Citizens: Narratives of the Migrant Crisis in India during the Pandemic

Niyathi R. Krishna, P. Sivakumar, Supriya Subramani, S. I. Rajan
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Abstract

This article illustrates how the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic led to an internal migrant crisis in India, making the country realise the presence of physical borders within itself. Through a narrative analysis of the chronicles of internal migrant workers and the migrant crisis published in print media during the first wave of COVID-19, this article elucidates how internal borders within a country became impermeable, affecting the rights and well-being of vulnerable citizens, who were labelled ‘disease carriers’. The discrimination and othering faced by migrants aggravated during this period, making them more prone to fall through the cracks of the crisis. Although mobility restrictions were important public health tools to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 infections, they undoubtedly exacerbated the pre-existing socio-economic inequities and vulnerabilities. Problematising these aspects of the migrant crisis during the pandemic, this article proposes migration policies and governance through effective public communication, inclusive decisions and human rights as a way forward.
COVID-19,内部过渡和弱势公民:大流行病期间印度的移民危机叙事
本文阐述了国家对 COVID-19 大流行病的反应如何导致印度的国内移民危机,使印度意识到国内存在实际边界。本文通过对 COVID-19 第一波疫情期间在印刷媒体上发表的国内移民工人和移民危机编年史的叙事分析,阐明了一个国家的内部边界是如何变得密不透风,影响到被贴上 "疾病携带者 "标签的弱势公民的权利和福祉的。在此期间,移民面临的歧视和他者化现象加剧,使他们更容易从危机的夹缝中逃脱。虽然限制流动是减少 COVID-19 感染传播的重要公共卫生手段,但无疑加剧了原有的社会经济不平等和脆弱性。本文对大流行病期间移民危机的这些方面提出了质疑,并建议通过有效的公共沟通、包容性决策和人权来制定移民政策和进行管理,以此作为前进的方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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