Colonias, Water, and Extractable Bodies: COVID19’s impact on the Rio Grande Valley

IF 0.1
H. Molina, R. Carly
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper develops the concept of “extractible bodies” and extends it to apply to Latinxs' experience in the Rio Grande Valley (RGV) subject to structural problems and predatory market practices before and during the pandemic. The RGV has had more COVID cases than counties of equal population size. Through a mixed-methods approach, this paper describes, in detail, how racist state practices, structural inadequacies, poor administration, and predatory capitalism effectively explain why the RGV was the epicenter of COVID-19 in the State of Texas in 2020. We introduce a concept, extractable bodies, to show how Mexican Americans provide limitless opportunities for exploitation while, at the same time, lacking basic public services and shouldering the blame for such circumstances. We focus our analysis on Latinx “essential workers” in an area challenged by health issues, high obesity rates, inadequate infrastructure, the situation in las colonias, and how these factors contributed to the COVID crisis. KEYWORDS: COVID 19, Latinxs, Mixed Methods, Health Disparity, Racism, South Texas
结肠、水和可提取体:covid - 19对里约热内卢格兰德山谷的影响
本文发展了“可提取主体”的概念,并将其扩展到拉丁人在大流行之前和期间受到结构性问题和掠夺性市场做法影响的里约热内卢格兰德山谷(RGV)的经验。与人口规模相当的县相比,该地区的新冠肺炎病例更多。通过混合方法,本文详细描述了种族主义国家的做法、结构性缺陷、管理不善和掠夺性资本主义如何有效地解释了为什么RGV是2020年德克萨斯州COVID-19的震中。我们引入了一个概念,可提取的身体,以展示墨西哥裔美国人如何提供无限的剥削机会,同时缺乏基本的公共服务,并为此承担责任。我们将分析重点放在拉丁裔“关键工人”上,该地区面临健康问题、高肥胖率、基础设施不足、las colonias局势的挑战,以及这些因素如何导致COVID危机。关键词:COVID - 19,拉丁裔,混合方法,健康差异,种族主义,南德克萨斯州
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
Theory in Action
Theory in Action SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
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