“小婴儿上了天堂”:吉姆·克劳时代阿肯色州黑人儿童生存劣势的混合方法研究。

IF 1 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Cheryl Elman, Kathryn Feltey, Barbara Wittman, Corey Stevens, Molly B Isenberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

几乎所有在1910年之前出生的美国黑人孩子都出生在美国南部。我们使用混合方法设计来检查黑人儿童在20世纪交替时期在吉姆·克劳制度下的生存劣势。我们将重点放在1910年的阿肯色州,利用州内农业(种植园与自给农业)、疾病环境和地理种族集中(宏观隔离)的异质性。这种对一个州的关注允许有目的的抽样,包括工程进步管理局和面纱背后的阿肯色州黑人的口头采访,他们出生或生活在该州的吉姆克劳制度下。我们还使用1910年与美国十年一次和1916年种植园人口普查相关联的完整计数综合公共使用微数据系列(IPUMS)来检查阿肯色州已婚、已生育妇女儿童死亡率的种族差异(n = 234,811)。计数回归模型发现,在阿肯色州从事种植园经济的母亲与从事自给农业的母亲之间,黑人-白人儿童死亡率差距最大;暴露于较差的卫生环境;居住在租赁农场与自有农场家庭;而且个人资源有限,比如读写能力。口头叙述说明了黑人儿童的生活如何反映了与种族化政策和南方种族歧视做法相关的环境、生活水平、社会心理和其他健康风险;它们捕捉到了将那个时代的制度性种族主义和儿童死亡率联系在一起的隐藏的历史进程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
'Little Baby's gone to Heaven': A Mixed-Methods Study of Black Children's Survival Disadvantage in Jim Crow-Era Arkansas.

Nearly all US Black children born before 1910 were born in the American South. We use a mixed-methods design to examine Black children's survival disadvantage over the twentieth century's turn under the rising regime of Jim Crow. We focus on 1910 Arkansas, taking advantage of within-state heterogeneity in agriculture (plantation vs. subsistence farming), disease environments, and geographic racial concentration (macro-segregation). This one-state focus allows purposive sampling of Works Progress Administration and Behind the Veil oral interviews of Arkansan Black Americans who were born or lived under the state's Jim Crow regime. We also use the 1910 complete-count Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS) linked to US Decennial and 1916 Plantation Censuses to examine race-related differences in child mortality rates among ever-married, parous Arkansas women (n = 234,811). Count regression models find the Black-White child mortality gap widest among Arkansas mothers economically tied to plantation vs. subsistence agriculture; exposed to worse health environments; living in tenant farm vs. owned-farm households; and with limited individual resources such as literacy. Oral accounts illustrate how Black children's lives reflected contextual, living standard, psychosocial, and other health risks associated with the racialized policies and practices of the Jim Crow South; they capture otherwise hidden historical processes that linked the era's institutional racism and child mortality.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: Social Science History seeks to advance the study of the past by publishing research that appeals to the journal"s interdisciplinary readership of historians, sociologists, economists, political scientists, anthropologists, and geographers. The journal invites articles that blend empirical research with theoretical work, undertake comparisons across time and space, or contribute to the development of quantitative and qualitative methods of analysis. Online access to the current issue and all back issues of Social Science History is available to print subscribers through a combination of HighWire Press, Project Muse, and JSTOR via a single user name or password that can be accessed from any location (regardless of institutional affiliation).
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