死亡的世界经济:种族、肉类加工厂和COVID-19

IF 2.4 2区 社会学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Annie Isabel Fukushima, Marie Sarita Gaytán, Leticia Alvarez Gutiérrez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着COVID-19的爆发和死亡肆虐美国肉类加工设施,公司和官员支持生产而不是人员。通过分析报纸文章、法庭记录、新闻稿和公司网站的内容,我们认为:(1)尽管肉类工厂的工人处于“必不可少”的地位,但他们是可抛弃的劳动力;(2)工厂工人的可有可无是种族化历史进程的结果。主要是移民和有色人种劳工的消耗性发生在我们所谓的“死亡世界经济”中——通过这个系统,公司和国家一起,将身体的疾病、伤害和死亡正常化,跨越时间和空间。针对2019冠状病毒病期间暴力加剧的情况,工厂员工及其家属倡导其社区的安全需求,强调行业的不作为,并要求公司和州政府官员承担责任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Death world economy: Race, meat-processing plants, and COVID-19
As COVID-19 outbreaks and deaths ravaged US meat-processing facilities, companies and officials supported production instead of people. Analyzing the content of newspaper articles, court records, press releases, and company websites, we argue that (1) despite their “essential” status, meat factory workers are a disposable labor force; and (2) factory worker dispensability is the result of a racialized historical process. The expendability of primarily immigrant and people of color laborers takes place in what we call a “death world economy”—a system through which corporations, together with the state, normalize the relegation of bodies to disease, injury, and death across time and space. Responding to the intensification of this violence during COVID-19, plant employees and their families advocate for their communities’ safety needs, highlight industry inaction, and demand accountability from companies and state officials.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
7.40%
发文量
78
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