"They Don't Care If We Live or Die": A Qualitative Analysis Examining the US Immigration System's Treatment of Undocumented Communities during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Ethnicity & Disease Pub Date : 2024-05-27 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.18865/ed.34.1.8
Mienah Z Sharif, Alejandra Cabral, Héctor E Alcalá, Muna A Hassan, Bita Amani
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Abstract

Historically, the US immigration system (ie, institutions, agencies, and laws) has served the goals and principles of white supremacy through its treatment of globally displaced people and this appears to have continued through the COVID pandemic. Yet, the implications for immigrant health are not routinely addressed in mainstream public health discourse, and especially so in regard to public health disasters. This study conducted a series of focus groups with participants from social justice organizations working with immigrants, migrants, undocumented persons, refugees, persons seeking asylum, and persons detained in immigration jails to collect stories on how the immigration system undermined efforts to control the spread of COVID-19 and exacerbated health inequity within immigrant jails and across related community contexts during the pandemic. Focus groups were conducted to explore issues related to immigrants and immigration detention during the COVID-19 pandemic. There was a total of N=14 participants across the 4 focus groups with a dedicated focus group on perspectives of Black immigrants/from Black immigrant organizations only. Each focus group consisted of 3 to 4 participants. Five key themes emerged: 1) dehumanization of immigrants and migrants and devaluation of their lives; 2) inhumane conditions of confinement that propagate risk of disease; 3) denial of resources for COVID-19 prevention and mitigation; 4) expansion of intersecting oppressive systems; and 5) community-based resistance and mobilization against immigration policies and enforcement. Our findings highlight the harms from policing, criminalization, and exclusion that racialized communities face as a result of the (in)actions within the immigration system during a public health disaster including the COVID context.

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"他们不在乎我们的死活":定性分析考察 COVID-19 大流行期间美国移民系统对待无证群体的方式。
从历史上看,美国移民系统(即机构、机关和法律)通过对待全球流离失所者,为白人至上的目标和原则服务,这种情况似乎一直延续到 COVID 大流行。然而,对移民健康的影响并没有在主流公共卫生讨论中得到例行讨论,尤其是在公共卫生灾难中。本研究开展了一系列焦点小组活动,参与者来自为移民、移徙者、无证人员、难民、寻求庇护者和被拘留在移民监狱中的人员服务的社会正义组织,以收集有关移民系统如何在大流行期间破坏控制 COVID-19 传播的努力,以及如何加剧移民监狱内和相关社区背景下的健康不平等的故事。为探讨 COVID-19 大流行期间与移民和移民拘留有关的问题,进行了焦点小组讨论。4 个焦点小组共有 14 人参加,其中一个焦点小组专门探讨黑人移民/黑人移民组织的观点。每个焦点小组由 3 至 4 名参与者组成。出现了五个关键主题:1)移民和移徙者的非人化及其生活的贬值;2)非人道的监禁条件增加了疾病风险;3)COVID-19 预防和缓解资源的拒绝;4)相互交叉的压迫制度的扩张;5)以社区为基础的对移民政策和执法的抵制和动员。我们的研究结果凸显了在包括 COVID 在内的公共卫生灾难期间,移民系统的(不)行为给种族化社区带来的治安、刑事定罪和排斥等伤害。
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来源期刊
Ethnicity & Disease
Ethnicity & Disease 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethnicity & Disease is an international journal that exclusively publishes information on the causal and associative relationships in the etiology of common illnesses through the study of ethnic patterns of disease. Topics focus on: ethnic differentials in disease rates;impact of migration on health status; social and ethnic factors related to health care access and health; and metabolic epidemiology. A major priority of the journal is to provide a forum for exchange between the United States and the developing countries of Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
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