灾难和联邦恢复援助对地方自雇率的种族不平等影响

IF 1.8 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Social Currents Pub Date : 2021-08-12 DOI:10.1177/23294965211028841
A. Bento, James R. Elliott
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本研究考察了种族不平等在2000年至2010年期间,与自然灾害影响和联邦恢复援助有关的自我就业率的变化。它提出了这样一种观点,即这种不平等可能源于与白人特权相关的机会囤积,以及与种族不平等和排斥相关的普遍突出的社会脆弱性。为了验证这一命题,我们使用来自美国人口普查局、美国空间灾害事件和损失数据库以及联邦紧急事务管理局的县级数据进行了变化得分分析。结果表明:(a)总体而言,自雇率随着当地自然灾害造成的财产损失而增加,特别是在白人和拉丁裔工人中;(b)这些增长在很大程度上是由于收到的用于灾后恢复的联邦公共援助金额,而不是财产损失本身;(c)白人工人在联邦复苏援助中经历了最积极、最持续的自我雇佣增长。讨论了当前和未来的灾难和政府援助对理解种族不平等的影响。
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The Racially Unequal Impacts of Disasters and Federal Recovery Assistance on Local Self-Employment Rates
This study examines racial inequalities in changing self-employment rates associated with natural hazard impacts and federal recovery assistance in ethnoracially diverse metropolitan counties between 2000 and 2010. It advances the viewpoint that such inequalities can stem from hoarded opportunities tied to white privilege in addition to commonly highlighted social vulnerabilities tied to racial inequities and exclusion. To test that proposition, we conduct change-score analyses using county-level data from the US Census Bureau, the Spatial Hazard Events and Losses Database for the United States, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Results indicate that (a) overall, self-employment rates increase with local property damages from natural hazards, especially among white and Latino workers; (b) those increases are largely explained by the amount of federal public assistance received for disaster recovery, not property damages themselves; and (c) white workers experience the most positive and consistent increases in self-employment from federal recovery assistance. Implications for understanding racial inequities stemming from current and future disasters and government assistance are discussed.
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来源期刊
Social Currents
Social Currents SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Social Currents, the official journal of the Southern Sociological Society, is a broad-ranging social science journal that focuses on cutting-edge research from all methodological and theoretical orientations with implications for national and international sociological communities. The uniqueness of Social Currents lies in its format. The front end of every issue is devoted to short, theoretical, agenda-setting contributions and brief, empirical and policy-related pieces. The back end of every issue includes standard journal articles that cover topics within specific subfields of sociology, as well as across the social sciences more broadly.
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