Asian communities’ well-being in Aotearoa during Covid-19

IF 0.5 Q4 SOCIAL WORK Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work Pub Date : 2023-04-26 DOI:10.11157/anzswj-vol35iss1id1027
Lynne Soon-Chean Park, R. Jaung, Joohyun Park, Changzoo Song
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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Anti-Asian racism was a feature of the social response to the Covid-19 pandemic, and its impact on the well-being of Asian communities warrants closer examination. The current study aimed to gauge whether the sense of belonging mitigated the adverse effects of racism on life satisfaction for self-identified Asian New Zealanders. METHODS: This analysis included 1341 responses to a cross-sectional online survey conducted in 2021. Descriptive analyses outline how components of a sense of belonging were distributed among participants and those who experienced racism during the Covid-19 pandemic. We used linear regression to examine the role of a sense of belonging as a potential pathway variable in the association between experiencing racism and life satisfaction. FINDINGS: In this survey, four out of 10 participants reported experiencing racism in the first 18 months of the pandemic. Participants’ life satisfaction decreased slightly since January 2020 (p<0.001). Experiencing racism was associated with decreased life satisfaction. All the components of sense of belonging reduced the magnitude of this negative association between racism experience and life satisfaction, in particular, expressing one’s own ethnic identity and belonging in Aotearoa. CONCLUSIONS: Given that anti-Asian racism is currently a feature of life and a significant stressor during the pandemic, this study provides empirical evidence of the protective role of a sense of belonging against anti-Asian racism. This study focused on Asian members in Aotearoa New Zealand, but its practical implications have the potential to support other minoritised ethnic communities who also experience racism during the pandemic and beyond.
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2019冠状病毒病期间澳大利亚亚裔社区的福祉
导读:反亚裔种族主义是应对新冠肺炎大流行的社会反应的一个特征,它对亚裔社区福祉的影响值得进一步研究。目前的研究旨在衡量归属感是否减轻了种族主义对自我认同的亚裔新西兰人生活满意度的不利影响。方法:该分析包括对2021年进行的横断面在线调查的1341份回复。描述性分析概述了归属感的组成部分如何在参与者和在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间经历过种族主义的人之间分配。我们使用线性回归来检验归属感在经历种族主义和生活满意度之间的关联中作为潜在途径变量的作用。调查结果:在这项调查中,每10名参与者中有4人报告在大流行的前18个月经历过种族主义。自2020年1月以来,参与者的生活满意度略有下降(p<0.001)。经历种族歧视与生活满意度下降有关。归属感的所有组成部分都降低了种族主义经历与生活满意度之间的负相关程度,特别是表达自己的种族认同和归属感。结论:鉴于反亚裔种族主义目前是生活的一个特征,也是大流行期间的一个重要压力源,本研究为归属感对反亚裔种族主义的保护作用提供了经验证据。这项研究的重点是新西兰奥特罗阿的亚洲成员,但其实际意义有可能支持其他在大流行期间和以后也遭受种族主义的少数民族社区。
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