COVID-19 与公共住房中污名化的生物政治学:大流行病时期的分化实践与社区边界。

IF 2.5 2区 医学 Q2 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Health Sociology Review Pub Date : 2024-08-16 DOI:10.1080/14461242.2024.2390019
Kiran Pienaar, Paul Kelaita, Dean Murphy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2020 年在澳大利亚墨尔本实施的 COVID-19 "严密封锁 "针对的是公共住宅区,从而利用了与公共住宅相关的风险感知,因为公共住宅区是后工业化城市中最受鄙视的场所。本文通过对墨尔本公共住房租户关于 COVID-19 封锁经历的访谈,分析了污名化在居民描述中的地位。将 Wacquant 等人(2014 年)提出的 "地域成见 "概念与成见生物政治学的社会学研究相结合,我们考虑了成见的动态变化,追溯了成见如何发挥划定社区边界的作用,并证明大流行病遏制措施的合理性。居民们要面对多层次的成见,包括对公共住房的刻板印象、对邻近居民的规范判断,以及存在结构性问题的更广泛的公共住房系统。这些社区的成员既是污名化的目标,又试图与那些被视为污名化载体的人保持距离。我们的参与者报告说,他们采取了社会疏远策略,根据外貌、吸毒推测和过去的行为对感知到的风险进行规范性评估。我们探讨了这些地域成见的影响,并追溯了将公共住房构建为城市贫困地区的排斥逻辑,这些地区是被视为威胁社区健康的卑劣 "他人 "的家园。
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COVID-19 and the biopolitics of stigma in public housing: dividing practices and community boundaries in pandemic times.

The COVID-19 'hard lockdowns' in Melbourne, Australia in 2020 targeted public housing estates thus trading on perceptions of risk associated with public housing as some of the most stigmatised sites in post-industrial cities. This article draws on interviews with Melbourne public housing tenants on their experience of COVID-19 lockdowns to analyse the place of stigma in residents' accounts. Pairing Wacquant et al's (2014) concept of 'territorial stigma' with sociological work on the biopolitics of stigma we consider the dynamics of stigma, tracing how it functions to delimit community boundaries and justify pandemic containment measures. Residents navigate multiple layers of stigma, including stereotypes of public housing, normative judgements of neighbouring residents, and a broader public housing system riven with structural issues. Members of these communities are both the targets of stigma and seek to distance themselves from those seen as vectors of stigma. Our participants report mobilising social distancing strategies couched in normative assessments of perceived risk based on physical appearance, presumed drug use and past conduct. We explore the implications of these enactments of territorial stigma and trace the logics of abjection that construct public housing as deprived urban zones, home to abject 'Others' perceived as threatening the health of the community.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: An international, scholarly peer-reviewed journal, Health Sociology Review explores the contribution of sociology and sociological research methods to understanding health and illness; to health policy, promotion and practice; and to equity, social justice, social policy and social work. Health Sociology Review is published in association with The Australian Sociological Association (TASA) under the editorship of Eileen Willis. Health Sociology Review publishes original theoretical and research articles, literature reviews, special issues, symposia, commentaries and book reviews.
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