重新思考中产阶级化对美国黑人社区健康的影响:迈向种族化的健康框架

IF 1.9 3区 经济学 Q2 URBAN STUDIES
Shannon Whittaker, Carolyn B. Swope, Danya Keene
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要目前的研究表明,中产阶级化是健康的重要决定因素。此外,本研究得出结论,中产阶级化对健康的影响是异质的,可能对美国黑人产生不利影响。然而,现有的中产阶级化和健康研究并没有充分参与产生这些不平衡影响的种族化过程。为了解决这一差距,我们开发了一个概念框架来描述中产阶级化如何为美国黑人创造独特的体验和不同的健康影响。运用种族资本主义的镜头,我们研究了美国结构性种族主义城市和住房政策的持续遗产是如何从黑人社区撤资和贬值的;因此,它们很容易受到随后通过中产阶级化进行的再投资。接下来,我们考虑这段历史如何为黑人居民创造独特的健康脆弱性。最后,我们描述了流离失所的途径——物理的和象征性的——通过这些独特的健康脆弱性形成健康差异。作者要感谢Derek Hyra博士、Melody Tulier博士、Emma Tran和Marie-Fatima hyacins博士提出的有益意见和建议。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。对公共卫生硕士Shannon Whittaker的资助由国家精神卫生研究所(资助号T32MH020031)和国家少数民族健康和健康差异研究所(资助号1F31MD017129-01A1)资助的博士前奖学金提供。公共卫生硕士Shannon Whittaker也得到了Robert Wood Johnson基金会卫生政策研究学者项目的支持。作者简介香农·惠特克香农·惠特克是耶鲁大学公共卫生学院社会与行为科学专业的博士候选人。她的研究兴趣在于地点,种族,健康和历史的交叉点,在那里她研究社会,文化和政治进程,如士绅化如何影响有色人种,特别是黑人社区的边缘化社区的健康。caroline B. Swope,哥伦比亚大学城市规划博士研究生。她的研究兴趣集中在住房和健康差距之间的关系,特别关注历史住房政策在塑造当今中产阶级化的不公平健康影响中的作用。丹雅·基恩是耶鲁大学公共卫生学院的社会和行为科学副教授。她的研究重点是住房和住房政策作为人口健康公平的决定因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rethinking the effects of gentrification on the health of Black communities in the United States: Towards a racialized health framework
ABSTRACTCurrent research suggests that gentrification is an important determinant of health. Furthermore, this research concludes that the health impacts of gentrification are heterogeneous and may have adverse impacts on Black Americans. However, existing gentrification and health research has not fully engaged with the racialized processes that produce these uneven impacts. To address this gap, we develop a conceptual framework to describe how gentrification may create unique experiences and differentiated health impacts for Black Americans. Applying a lens of racial capitalism, we examine how an ongoing legacy of structurally racist urban and housing policy in the United States has disinvested from and devalued Black communities; thereby rendering them vulnerable to subsequent reinvestment through gentrification. Next, we consider how this history creates unique health vulnerabilities to gentrification for Black residents. Finally, we describe pathways of displacement—physical and symbolic—through which these unique health vulnerabilities are shaped to produce differences in health.KEYWORDS: Gentrificationhealth disparitiesraceneighborhoods AcknowledgmentsThe authors would like to thank Dr. Derek Hyra, Dr. Melody Tulier, Emma Tran, and Marie-Fatima Hyacinthe for their helpful comments and suggestions.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationFundingSupport for Shannon Whittaker, MPH was provided by predoctoral fellowships funded by the National Institute of Mental Health under grant number T32MH020031 and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities under grant number 1F31MD017129-01A1. Shannon Whittaker, MPH also received support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Policy Research Scholars Program.Notes on contributorsShannon WhittakerShannon Whittaker is a doctoral candidate in social and behavioral sciences at the Yale School of Public Health. Her research interests lie at the intersection of place, race, health and history where she examines how social, cultural, and political processes such as gentrification impact the health of marginalized communities of color, particularly Black communities.Carolyn B. SwopeCarolyn Swope is a doctoral candidate in urban planning at Columbia University. Her research interests focus on the relationship between housing and health disparities, with particular attention to the role of historical housing policies in shaping inequitable health impacts of present-day gentrification.Danya KeeneDanya Keene is an associate professor of social and behavioral sciences at the Yale School of Public Health. Her research focuses on housing and housing policy as determinants of population health equity.
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来源期刊
Journal of Urban Affairs
Journal of Urban Affairs URBAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
4.80%
发文量
156
期刊介绍: Focusing on urban research and policy analysis, the Journal of Urban Affairs is among the most widely cited journals in the field. Published for the Urban Affairs Association, the journal offers multidisciplinary perspectives and explores issues of relevance to both scholars and practitioners, including: - Theoretical, conceptual, or methodological approaches to metropolitan and community problems - Empirical research that advances the understanding of society - Strategies for social change in the urban milieu - Innovative urban policies and programs - Issues of current interest to those who work in the field and those who study the urban and regional environment
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