种族和地域在风险和恢复力地理上的演变

Julie Arbit, B. Bottoms, E. Lewis, Alford A. Young
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引用次数: 0

摘要

环境地理学的进步促进了人与地之间的公平与正义。自然灾害代表了进入这个空间的粒状透镜,并突出了将社会景观与其自然地理相结合以实现持续系统进步的机会。更具体地说,洪水风险和恢复能力不成比例的地理位置体现了影响全球各地的周期性权力动态、剥削和压迫。美国特别关注进入太空和地方的发展;种族化的地域往往将黑人排除在土地、资源、流动性和代表权之外。解放之后,有限的物质和经济机会编纂了正式和非正式的歧视,导致洪水风险的增加,通过住房市场、建筑条件、基础设施等持续存在。这些不平等现象使许多社区不成比例地受到洪水造成的经济、健康和福祉损失的影响,从而加剧了周期性的撤资。世界各地的城市地理都表现出种族和民族特征的风险增加和恢复力减弱的模式,然而,许多争取公平的努力都将种族和地域问题视为独立的、新的挑战。在人(和复原力)与地方(和风险)的交汇处,进步、公平和正义根植于沿着几个世纪以来塑造了全球地理的人种学和社会学鸿沟的修复。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The evolution of race and place in geographies of risk and resilience
Progress in Environmental Geography advances equity and justice at the intersections of people and place. Natural disasters represent a granular lens into this space and highlight opportunities to incorporate social landscapes with their physical geographies toward sustained systemic progress. More specifically, disproportionate geographies of flood risk and resilience exemplify cyclical power dynamics, exploitation, and oppression that have shaped places globally. The U.S. provides a particular focus into the evolution of access to space and place; racialized geographies often exclude Black Americans from land, resources, mobility, and representation. Following Emancipation, limited physical and economic opportunity codified formal and informal discrimination that led to heightened flood risk that persists today via housing markets, building conditions, infrastructure, and more. These inequities leave many communities disproportionately more impacted by economic, health, and well-being losses from flooding, which exacerbates cyclical disinvestment. Urban geographies around the world exhibit racially and ethnically charged patterns of heightened risk and weakened resilience, yet many efforts toward equity treat the issues of race and place as separate, novel challenges. Progress, equity, and justice at the intersection of people (and resilience) with place (and risk) are rooted in reparation along ethnographic and sociological chasms that have shaped geographies globally for centuries.
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