The plantation system and the roots of the southern rural mortality penalty in the northern Blackland Prairies of Texas

IF 3.8 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health & Place Pub Date : 2024-06-03 DOI:10.1016/j.healthplace.2024.103234
Rick W.A. Smith , Robin G. Nelson , Amanda R. Magpiong , Stacey K. South , Audrey Dervarics , Paige Plattner , Blair Coe Schweiger , Austin W. Reynolds
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Abstract

In recent decades, public health researchers have observed that the health of rural people has declined relative to the health of urban people in the United States. This disparity in health and life expectancy across the rural/urban divide has been described as the Rural Mortality Penalty. However, public health researchers have also noted that health and life expectancies are not uniform across the rural United States, but vary according to race, sex, gender, and other factors. Rural health disparities also vary geospatially and are especially pronounced in the American South, leading to recent calls for greater attention to the structural factors that shape the health of rural Southerners. In this study, we take an anthropological and historically explicit approach to study the impacts of systemic violence on rural health. Specifically, we focus on farm labor within the plantation system as a context where geospatial, racial, and sexual differences in mortality, often studied in isolation, find a common historical source. Here we analyze vital records data from the post-emancipation period in the Blackland Prairies ecoregion of Texas, a period when emerging forms of plantation labor such as tenant farming, convict leasing, and migrant labor were being developed to maintain the plantation economy after the abolishment of chattel slavery. We find that the plantation system remains a strong predictor of differential mortalities in rural Texas, accounting for nearly all the variation that exists across the rural/urban divide and elucidating the complex interactions of race, sex, labor, and health in the rural South.

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种植园制度和得克萨斯州北部黑地草原南部农村死亡率惩罚的根源
近几十年来,公共卫生研究人员注意到,在美国,农村人口的健康状况相对于城市人口的健康状况有所下降。这种城乡之间的健康和预期寿命差距被称为 "农村死亡率惩罚"。不过,公共卫生研究人员也注意到,美国农村地区的健康状况和预期寿命并不一致,而是因种族、性别、性 别和其他因素而异。农村的健康差异也因地理空间而异,在美国南部尤为明显,因此最近有人呼吁更多地关注影响南方农村居民健康的结构性因素。在本研究中,我们采用人类学和历史学的方法来研究系统性暴力对农村健康的影响。具体来说,我们将重点放在种植园系统内的农场劳动上,在此背景下,通常被孤立研究的死亡率中的地理空间、种族和性别差异找到了共同的历史根源。在这里,我们分析了得克萨斯州黑地草原生态区解放后的生命记录数据,在这一时期,种植园劳动的新兴形式,如佃农、罪犯租赁和移民劳动得到了发展,以维持废除动产奴隶制后的种植园经济。我们发现,种植园制度仍然是预测得克萨斯州农村地区不同死亡率的一个重要因素,几乎可以解释城乡之间存在的所有差异,并阐明了南方农村地区种族、性别、劳动力和健康之间复杂的相互作用。
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来源期刊
Health & Place
Health & Place PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
6.20%
发文量
176
审稿时长
29 days
期刊介绍: he journal is an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to the study of all aspects of health and health care in which place or location matters.
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