去殖民化COVID-19大流行

IF 0.4 0 RELIGION
Rebecca Duncan, J. Höglund
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引用次数: 1

摘要

新冠肺炎疫情一开始就被描述为一种天生的新事物,能够跨越和消除世界各地社会分层的经济、种族、性别和宗教分歧。然而,持续的疫情并不是新的或平等的,而是由全球范围内已经发生的危机所推动和加剧的。在这篇文章中,我们一方面研究了新冠疫情与仍然活跃的种族化和性别化权力形成之间的关系,另一方面,新冠疫情又与分散和不均衡的全球紧急情况密不可分。正如环境历史学家Jason W.Moore所指出的,这一紧急情况对“妇女、有色人种和(新)殖民地人口”的影响不成比例(2019:54),新冠肺炎的影响分配也同样不均衡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Decolonising the COVID-19 pandemic
At its inception, the COVID-19 pandemic was described as something inherently new, capable of crossing and erasing the economic, racial, gendered, and religious divides that stratify societies around the world. However, the ongoing pandemic is not new or egalitarian, but fuelled by, and fuelling, crises already under way on a global scale. In this article we examine on the one hand the relationship between the pandemic and still-active formations of racialised and gendered power, and on the other the pandemic's inextricability from a dispersed and uneven planetary emergency. As the environmental historian Jason W. Moore notes, this emergency disproportionately affects ‘women, people of colour and (neo)colonial populations’ (2019: 54), and the effects of COVID-19 are similarly unevenly allocated.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
25.00%
发文量
24
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