婴儿迷失:种族主义、生存和婴儿死亡率的平静政治,从A到Z

IF 0.3 4区 社会学 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
M. McLemore
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Full disclosure: My work is cited and I am named in the book, so it is not lost on me that I read and am reviewing this book after the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision overturning Roe v. Wade in the United States. Ironically, the Supreme Court of the United States will hear a case this term that specifically addresses the legal aspects of fetal personhood. Therefore, it is particularly profound for me—as a scholar who works across the reproductive spectrum and whose attention is needed on acute problems such as the intersection of the Black maternal health crisis and draconian abortion restrictions—to be addressing infant mortality, a problem that has been documented for decades. That said, these concepts are closely related, and I will use my review of Casper’s book to show the brilliance of her approach and how it adds to analytic frames that have been historically siloed. She provides a deeply researched book with rich references that allow transdisciplinary scholars to connect some dots that perhaps for others may be blocked because of disciplinary perspectives—yet another gift from sociologists. Black feminists and other scholars have proposed reproductive justice as an antidote, strategy, theory, and organizing frame to drive and guide action (Ross and Solinger 2017). Given that the tenets of reproductive justice are outlined in the book and briefly summarized as the right to have children, to not have children, and to parent children that families already have in safe and sustainable environments, to understand Babylost as a book that is not championing reproductive justice would be a mistake. First, even though the words ‘‘social safety net’’ appear nowhere in the book, there are implicit examples throughout Casper’s writing that suggest that a more robust social safety net would result in reductions of infant mortality. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

在《迷失的婴儿:种族主义、生存和婴儿死亡率的平静政治》一书中,Monica J.Casper采用了一种创新的方法,将美国婴儿死亡率的可耻悲剧(c.f.Jones,2016)置于历史和社会学背景下。她使用字母表来组织导致可预防婴儿死亡的因素,这些因素可分为临床、政治、社会、理论和实际类别,这种方法使读者能够掌握阻止婴儿死亡所需的全部内容和简单性。此外,她完成了一项艰巨的任务,即解决并非所有婴儿死亡都是可以预防的这一严峻现实,但仍促使我们思考经历这些损失的家庭。这是一种有效的方法,其中充满了切实可行的建议和解决办法。全面披露:我的作品被引用,书中也提到了我的名字,所以在美国多布斯诉杰克逊妇女健康组织推翻罗诉韦德案的裁决之后,我阅读并审查了这本书。具有讽刺意味的是,美国最高法院本学期将审理一个专门涉及胎儿人格法律方面的案件。因此,作为一名跨生殖领域的学者,我需要关注黑人孕产妇健康危机和严厉的堕胎限制等尖锐问题,解决婴儿死亡率问题,这一问题已经记录了几十年,这对我来说尤其深刻。也就是说,这些概念是密切相关的,我将用我对卡斯珀的书的评论来展示她的方法的精彩之处,以及它是如何添加到历史上孤立的分析框架中的。她提供了一本经过深入研究的书,其中有丰富的参考文献,让跨学科学者能够将一些可能因学科视角而被屏蔽的点联系起来——这是社会学家的又一份礼物。黑人女权主义者和其他学者提出,生殖正义是一种解药、策略、理论和组织框架,可以推动和指导行动(Ross和Solinger,2017)。鉴于本书概述了生殖正义的原则,并简要总结为有权生育、不生育以及在安全和可持续的环境中养育家庭已经拥有的孩子,将《迷失宝宝》理解为一本不支持生殖正义的书是错误的。首先,尽管“社会安全网”一词在书中没有出现,但卡斯珀的著作中有一些隐含的例子表明,一个更强大的社会安全网将降低婴儿死亡率。她引用的证据也证明了这一点。同样,如果我们要在需要时采取行动,人类服务与健康——即卫生与人类服务——保持一致的必要性是显而易见的。其次,卡斯珀巧妙地将科学的多个领域交织在一起,将人文学科与临床和卫生服务提供文献相结合,并提出了一个微妙的理由,即有必要将人文学科重新合法化,作为护理、医学和其他学科在卫生专业实践的基础。第三,卡斯珀强调,撤资和虐待是可以迅速针对的因素,以解决婴儿420评论中显示的可耻的不公平现象
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Babylost: Racism, Survival, and the Quiet Politics of Infant Mortality, from A to Z
In Babylost: Racism, Survival, and The Quiet Politics of Infant Mortality, from A To Z, Monica J. Casper takes an innovative approach to put in both historical and sociological context the shameful tragedy (c.f. Jones 2016) of infant mortality in the United States. She uses the alphabet to organize the factors that contribute to preventable infant mortality that can be divided into clinical, political, social, theoretical, and actual categories, and this method allows for readers to grasp both the entirety and the simplicity of what is necessary to stop babies from dying. Additionally, she achieves the difficult task of tackling the hard reality that not all infant deaths are preventable and yet still pushes us to think about the families that experience these losses. It is an effective approach that is filled with tangible suggestions and solutions. Full disclosure: My work is cited and I am named in the book, so it is not lost on me that I read and am reviewing this book after the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision overturning Roe v. Wade in the United States. Ironically, the Supreme Court of the United States will hear a case this term that specifically addresses the legal aspects of fetal personhood. Therefore, it is particularly profound for me—as a scholar who works across the reproductive spectrum and whose attention is needed on acute problems such as the intersection of the Black maternal health crisis and draconian abortion restrictions—to be addressing infant mortality, a problem that has been documented for decades. That said, these concepts are closely related, and I will use my review of Casper’s book to show the brilliance of her approach and how it adds to analytic frames that have been historically siloed. She provides a deeply researched book with rich references that allow transdisciplinary scholars to connect some dots that perhaps for others may be blocked because of disciplinary perspectives—yet another gift from sociologists. Black feminists and other scholars have proposed reproductive justice as an antidote, strategy, theory, and organizing frame to drive and guide action (Ross and Solinger 2017). Given that the tenets of reproductive justice are outlined in the book and briefly summarized as the right to have children, to not have children, and to parent children that families already have in safe and sustainable environments, to understand Babylost as a book that is not championing reproductive justice would be a mistake. First, even though the words ‘‘social safety net’’ appear nowhere in the book, there are implicit examples throughout Casper’s writing that suggest that a more robust social safety net would result in reductions of infant mortality. This is also borne out by evidence that she cites. Similarly, the need for human services to align with health— that is, Health and Human Services—is clear and obvious if we are to act in face of need. Second, Casper masterfully intertwines multiple domains of science, aligning the humanities with the clinical and health services provision literatures, and makes a subtle case for the need to re-legitimize the humanities as a foundation for the practice of nursing, medicine, and other disciplines in the health professions. Third, Casper highlights divestment and mistreatment as factors that could be rapidly targeted to address the shameful inequities that are shown in infant 420 Reviews
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