墨西哥移民的长期住房恢复:服务提供者如何驾驭种族化的反移民灾难恢复政策

Melissa Villarreal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

灾害的频率和强度都在增加。目前的许多灾害文献都采用了社会脆弱性的视角,考虑了政治、社会和经济因素如何影响灾前准备和灾后恢复。然而,即使有了这样的关注,关于移民人口及其长期恢复轨迹的文献仍然缺乏。本文将种族形成框架应用于灾难语境。我试图展示来自社区组织(cbo)的服务提供者如何引导种族化的反移民灾难恢复政策,以帮助德克萨斯州休斯顿的墨西哥移民社区在哈维飓风之后进行长期住房恢复。我进行了半结构化访谈和民族志观察与服务提供商的cbo位于休斯敦,为这些人提供灾后住房。我认为,灾难恢复系统是由种族结构和种族化的反移民政策组成的,被动地或主动地限制了墨西哥移民社区获得资源的机会。我发现,为了挑战灾难恢复系统的种族结构和种族化的反移民政策,服务提供者通过直接援助被排除在其他项目之外的墨西哥移民来帮助社区;与其他组织合作,整合有限的资源;帮助社区应对种族化的反移民官僚主义;并通过融入受害社区来建立信任。然而,调查结果也表明,这些组织在开展工作时面临重大挑战。这一研究为灾难研究带来了急需的种族和种族化理论的理论拓展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Long-term housing recovery among Mexican immigrants: How service providers navigate racialized anti-immigrant disaster recovery policies
Disasters are increasing in frequency and intensity. Much of the current disaster literature adopts a social vulnerability perspective, which considers how political, social, and economic factors influence pre-disaster preparation and post-disaster recovery. Even with this focus, however, there remains a dearth of literature on immigrant populations and their long-term recovery trajectories. This paper applies a racial formation framework to a disaster context. I seek to show how service providers from community-based organizations (CBOs) navigate racialized anti-immigrant disaster recovery policies to help the Mexican immigrant community in Houston, Texas with their long-term housing recovery after Hurricane Harvey. I conducted semi-structured interviews and ethnographic observations with service providers from CBOs located in Houston that serve this population with post-disaster housing. I argue that the disaster recovery system is comprised of racial structures and racialized anti-immigrant policies, passively and actively limiting the access to resources for the Mexican immigrant community. I found that to challenge the racial structures and racialized anti-immigrant policies of the disaster recovery system, service providers assist the community through direct assistance to Mexican immigrants excluded from other programs; collaboration with other organizations to combine limited resources; helping the community navigate racialized anti-immigrant bureaucracy; and building trust by embedding themselves in the victimized community. However, findings also show that these organizations face significant challenges in conducting their work. This research brings a much-needed theoretical expansion of race and racialization theories to disaster research.
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