从次贷危机的视角看新冠肺炎:结构性和制度性种族主义如何塑造了21世纪英国和美国的危机

Q1 Social Sciences Review of Black Political Economy Pub Date : 2022-03-01 DOI:10.1177/00346446211065174
Frank Curry, Gary Dymski, Tanita J Lewis, Hanna K Szymborska
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期特刊旨在利用历史实例,深入了解2019冠状病毒病大流行对黑人社区的社会经济影响和恢复的可能性。我们通过比较流感大流行对英国黑人的影响与2008年次贷危机对美国黑人的影响来解决这个问题。我们发现,在这两种情况下,一种种族不对称的损失模式和种族中立的政策反应,系统性地忽视了黑人和种族/少数民族社区所遭受的完全不同的损失。这两种模式都是这些国家制度性种族主义的表现。根据分层经济学的见解,并利用哈罗德·巴伦1985年提出的“种族形成”概念,我们展示了这些国家与奴隶制和帝国主义的历史关系如何导致了不同的种族控制结构。我们对英国政府政策的评论包括对英国种族和民族差异委员会2021年3月报告的批评。
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Seeing Covid-19 Through a Subprime Crisis lens: How Structural and Institutional Racism Have Shaped 21st-Century Crises in the U.K. and the U.S.

This special issue aims to use historical examples to gain insight into the socio-economic impact of, and possibilities of recovery from, the Covid-19 pandemic for Black communities. We approach this question by comparing the impact of the pandemic on Black Britons in the United Kingdom with that of the 2008 subprime crisis on Black Americans. We find that, in both cases, a pattern of racially asymmetric losses and race-neutral policy responses that have systematically ignored the disparate losses borne by Black and racial/ethnic minority communities. Both patterns are manifestations of these countries' institutional racism. Relying on insights from stratification economics and using the concept of "racial formation" introduced by Harold Baron in 1985, we show how these nations' historical relationships to slavery and imperialism have led to different structures of racial control. Our review of U.K. government policy includes a critique of the March 2021 report of the U.K. Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities.

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来源期刊
Review of Black Political Economy
Review of Black Political Economy Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The Review of Black Political Economy examines issues related to the economic status of African-American and Third World peoples. It identifies and analyzes policy prescriptions designed to reduce racial economic inequality. The journal is devoted to appraising public and private policies for their ability to advance economic opportunities without regard to their theoretical or ideological origins. A publication of the National Economic Association and the Southern Center for Studies in Public Policy of Clark College.
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