拒绝进入:COVID-19,表皮边界和黑人健康差距

IF 1.1 1区 文学 Q3 COMMUNICATION
K. Kizito, Andrew Carter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

公共卫生研究确立了种族和健康之间的明确联系,并将种族主义视为健康的社会决定因素;然而,很少有人关注公共卫生话语如何再现具体化黑人健康差异的边界机制。以新冠肺炎大流行为中心,探索边界逻辑如何再现这种不平等,我们引入“表皮边界”作为研究种族和公共卫生交叉点的创新和解放框架,将重点放在真皮(或皮肤)上作为我们的调查切入点。本文对更公平的公共卫生干预和实践的理论和方法发展提供了重要见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Denied access: COVID-19, the epidermal border and Black health disparities
ABSTRACT Public health research establishes clear links between race and health and identifies racism as a social determinant of health; however, little critical attention focuses on how public health discourses reproduce bordering mechanisms that reify Black health disparities. Centering the COVID-19 pandemic to explore how border logics reproduce such inequities, we introduce the “epidermal border” as an innovative and emancipatory framework for studying intersections of race and public health, drawing focus on the dermis (or skin) as our entry point of inquiry. This essay offers important insights into the theoretical and methodological development of more equitable public health interventions and practices.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
10.50%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies (CC/CS) is a peer-reviewed publication of the National Communication Association. CC/CS publishes original scholarship that situates culture as a site of struggle and communication as an enactment and discipline of power. The journal features critical inquiry that cuts across academic and theoretical boundaries. CC/CS welcomes a variety of methods including textual, discourse, and rhetorical analyses alongside auto/ethnographic, narrative, and poetic inquiry.
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