When top-down infrastructures fail: spaces and practices of care and community under COVID-19

IF 2.4 2区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Jordin Clark, Solange Muñoz, Jeremy Auerbach
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT Throughout this article, we focus on the lives and experiences of residents in the Sun Valley public housing project in Denver. During the stay-at-home orders, the Sun Valley residents – an economically impoverished yet diverse community that includes refugees, Black and LatinX families, single-parent households, and individuals who are permanently disabled – faced extremely precarious conditions. COVID exposed and exacerbated the already failed infrastructures in Sun Valley, but within this failure, radical openings emerged, new connections surfaced and alternative practices developed among the residents leading to vernacular infrastructures of care. To understand and highlight these vernacular infrastructures, we utilized a combination of photography and interviews to understand 17 residents’ and key community support actors’ experiences during the initial stay-at-home orders from March to June 2020. From this data, we argue that, through community practices and relationships, Sun Valley residents’ and community support networks addressed the crisis and uncertainty by developing vernacular infrastructures of care.
当自上而下的基础设施失效时:COVID-19下的护理和社区空间和实践
摘要在这篇文章中,我们关注丹佛太阳谷公共住房项目中居民的生活和经历。在居家令期间,太阳谷居民——一个经济贫困但多样化的社区,包括难民、黑人和拉丁裔家庭、单亲家庭以及永久残疾人士——面临着极其不稳定的条件。新冠肺炎暴露并加剧了太阳谷已经失败的基础设施,但在这场失败中,出现了激进的开放,新的联系浮出水面,居民中发展了替代做法,从而形成了当地的护理基础设施。为了理解和强调这些本土基础设施,我们结合摄影和采访,了解了17名居民和关键社区支持人员在2020年3月至6月最初的居家令期间的经历。根据这些数据,我们认为,通过社区实践和关系,太阳谷居民和社区支持网络通过发展当地的护理基础设施来解决危机和不确定性。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
16.00%
发文量
99
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