加拿大医疗暴力的隐藏历史:交叉的女权主义视角

Snow Wangding, D. Santhanam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在加拿大的历史叙述中,医疗暴力往往被忽视,而有利于进步和当前的进展。然而,为所有患者提供富有同情心的护理需要理解和承认医学界的过去和持续的违规行为。土著妇女的合法化和强制绝育不仅是公然无视知情同意的一个例子,而且是一个令人震惊和持续的创伤,突出了医学界对边缘化女性身体的监管。在20世纪初,加拿大的性绝育深深植根于优生学理论,被认为是解决经济阶层巨大差距和社会不平等的办法。土著妇女不成比例地受到加拿大政府和执业医疗机构的攻击和诋毁。这些措施在短短二十年的时间里使土著人口的出生率几乎减半。今天,加拿大医疗暴力的社会文化影响是显而易见的;禁止在土著社区强制绝育的法律还没有通过,而且在目前的临床病例中引用了对“滥交”土著妇女的刻板印象,造成了毁灭性的后果。本文旨在促进对土著妇女强制绝育的暴力历史的讨论,并描述加拿大政府将其制度化作为一项公共卫生措施,对长期存在的结构性种族主义产生持续影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Canada’s Hidden History of Medical Violence: An Intersectional Feminist Perspective
Medical violence in the Canadian historical narrative is often overlooked in favour of progress and current advancements. Yet, to deliver compassionate care to all patients requires an understanding and acknowledgement of the medical community’s past and persisting transgressions. The legalization and forced sterilization of Indigenous women is not only an example of blatant disregard for informed consent, but an egregious and continued trauma highlighting the medical community’s policing of marginalized female bodies. In the 1900s and deeply rooted in eugenic theory, sexual sterilization in Canada was framed as the solution for vast disparities in economic classes and social inequities. Indigenous women were disproportionately targeted and vilified by both the Canadian government and the practicing medical body. Such measures nearly halved birth rates in Indigenous populations in as little as two decades. The sociocultural effects of Canada’s medical violence are clear today; laws have yet to pass banning forced sterilization in Indigenous communities, and stereotypes of the ‘promiscuous’ Indigenous woman are cited in current clinical cases with devastating consequences. This article aims to contribute to discourse regarding the violent history of forced sterilization of Indigenous women and describe its institutionalization by the Canadian government as a public health measure with ongoing implications in perpetuating structural racism.
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