“Racism Masked as Safety Concerns”: The Experiences of Residents of Color With Racialized Coveillance in a Predominantly White Neighborhood

IF 1.8 2区 社会学 Q2 ETHNIC STUDIES Sociology of Race and Ethnicity Pub Date : 2023-08-09 DOI:10.1177/23326492231191496
Maria R. Lowe, Luis A. Romero, Madeline Carrola
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Abstract

Prior studies have focused on ways that White residents in predominantly White neighborhoods monitor their community for suspicious people and how these practices are racialized. However, only limited attention has been given to how residents of color in such neighborhoods experience these surveillance efforts. In this article, we explore how mostly White neighbors conduct on-the-ground monitoring of people of color in their daily lives, a process that we call “racialized coveillance.” Using data from neighborhood digital platforms, neighborhood materials, and 24 interviews with residents of color of an affluent, predominantly White community, we find that residents’ racialized coveillance sometimes misidentifies residents of color as suspicious outsiders. These efforts take the form of posts uploaded to the neighborhood’s social media sites, calls to the police, and in-person encounters. Such practices occur regularly and affect residents of color to varying degrees with Black male residents bearing the brunt of such efforts. As a result, we argue that racialized coveillance creates hostile territories for some residents of color in predominantly White neighborhoods, which contributes to the reproduction of these settings as White spaces.
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“被掩盖为安全问题的种族主义”:有色人种居民在白人占主导地位的社区中的种族主义行为
之前的研究主要集中在白人社区的白人居民监控社区可疑人员的方式,以及这些做法是如何被种族化的。然而,对这些社区的有色人种居民如何经历这些监视努力的关注有限。在这篇文章中,我们探讨了大多数白人邻居是如何在日常生活中对有色人种进行现场监控的,我们称之为“种族化监控”。利用来自社区数字平台的数据、社区资料以及对一个富裕的、以白人为主的社区的24位有色人种居民的访谈,我们发现,居民的种族化监视有时会将有色人种居民误认为可疑的局外人。这些努力的形式包括将帖子上传到社区的社交媒体网站,打电话给警察,以及面对面的接触。这种做法经常发生,不同程度地影响着有色人种居民,黑人男性居民首当其冲。因此,我们认为,在以白人为主的社区中,种族化的监视为一些有色人种创造了敌对领土,这有助于将这些环境复制为白人空间。
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CiteScore
4.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
62
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