过去流行病中的偏见

Sarah Adnan Bahsoun
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着新冠肺炎(COVID-19)在全球蔓延,反亚洲仇恨犯罪和政治言论激增。这些歧视行为反映了在过去的大流行中对其他群体的偏见,例如1346年至1353年黑死病期间欧洲的犹太人。这项研究旨在确定与过去流行病中所见的偏见相关的类似模式和潜在模式,重点关注三类:仇恨犯罪、政治言论和宗教信仰。本研究调查了黑死病期间对犹太人的偏见,1918年流感期间对美国移民的偏见,以及COVID-19期间对亚裔美国人的偏见,因为在大流行开始之前,对这些群体存在偏见的历史记录。总的来说,这项研究发现,在过去的大流行期间,没有一种不伴随着政治言论的仇恨犯罪的普遍模式。此外,在所研究的大流行病中,没有普遍的宗教信仰模式,这表明偏见不是由宗教动机推动的。鉴于本研究分析的流行病选择较少,对更多流行病进行进一步分析可以得出更有力的结论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prejudice in Past Pandemics
Accompanying the spread of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) across the globe was a proliferation in anti-Asian hate crimes and political rhetoric. These discriminatory actions mirrored the prejudice exhibited towards other groups in past pandemics, such as Jewish populations in Europe during the Black Death between 1346 and 1353. This study aimed to determine similar patterns relating to and underlying the prejudice seen in past pandemics, focusing on three categories: hate crimes, political rhetoric, and religiosity. Prejudice against Jewish people during the Bubonic plague, Immigrants in America during the 1918 Flu, and Asian Americans during COVID-19 were investigated in this study because of the historical record of existing prejudice against these groups before the start of the pandemics. Overall, this study found that there was no general pattern of hate crimes during past pandemics without accompanying political rhetoric. In addition, there was no general pattern in religiosity in the pandemics studied, suggesting that the prejudice was not fueled by religious motivations. Given the small selection of pandemics analyzed in this study, further analysis with more pandemics could present more robust conclusions.
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