“Whoever Dies, Dies”: A Pedagogical Model forUnderstanding the COVID-19 Outbreak in United States Prisons

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Human Organization Pub Date : 2021-11-29 DOI:10.17730/1938-3525-80.4.282
J. Scott
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Abstract

A year into the COVID-19 pandemic, nearly half of the United States prison population, or five times the rate found in the general population, had been infected. Limited social distancing and difficult to implement preventative measures helped to spread COVID-19 in prisons, while many incarcerated individuals felt that government policy prevented their ability to self-care. These feelings of alienation reflect a history of policy that links disease to deviance and social death. Based on the written self-reflections of anthropology students in Wisconsin prisons, this article outlines an ethnographic and pedagogical model for analyzing pandemic policy. Students learned to relate anthropological terminology to their critiques of policy and revealed how prisoners adapted to feelings of invisibility and hopelessness during a pandemic.
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“谁死谁死”:理解美国监狱新冠肺炎疫情的教育学模型
新冠肺炎大流行一年后,近一半的美国监狱人口,即普通人群感染率的五倍,已被感染。有限的社交距离和难以实施的预防措施有助于新冠肺炎在监狱中传播,而许多被监禁的人认为政府政策阻碍了他们的自我照顾能力。这些疏离感反映了一段将疾病与越轨和社会死亡联系在一起的政策历史。基于威斯康星州监狱人类学学生的书面自我反思,本文概述了一个用于分析流行病政策的人种学和教学模式。学生们学会了将人类学术语与他们对政策的批评联系起来,并揭示了囚犯如何适应疫情期间的隐形感和绝望感。
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来源期刊
Human Organization
Human Organization Multiple-
CiteScore
1.50
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发文量
31
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