海岸上的新冠肺炎:印度南喀拉拉邦渔村的流行病治理和抗议

IF 0.9 4区 经济学 Q4 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Journal of South Asian Development Pub Date : 2023-06-11 DOI:10.1177/09731741231162446
Johnson Jament, Maxmillan Martin, M. S. Visakh, F. Osella
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这篇文章中,我们反思了新冠肺炎干预措施对印度南喀拉拉邦沿海社区的影响,以及当地人口对后者的反应。特别是,我们绘制了2020年7月第二波疫情期间导致一些渔村自发抗议的事件。我们将表明,虽然在第一波疫情期间,沿海社区仍然支持政府干预,但随着疫情的发展,这种最初的支持开始减弱,并变得更加积极和广泛。我们认为,渔业社区态度的这种转变不仅是对更有力的遏制疫情政策后果的回应,也是对沿海社区突然被认定为该地区主要传染源的回应。我们认为,随之而来的对沿海社区实施的限制性措施,既有流行病学的担忧,也有媒体驱动的社会恐慌,这种恐慌建立在广泛的负面刻板印象之上,这些刻板印象在历史上一直被边缘化,甚至将喀拉拉邦的沿海社区定为犯罪。我们运用生物-口腔边缘化的概念来揭示特定的、在很大程度上刻板的和负面的身体属性和道德倾向对沿海渔业社区的人的身体和行为的归因,是关于新冠肺炎病毒传播的社会恐慌在喀拉拉邦南部展开的基础,从而导致渔民的激进反应。
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Covid on the Coast: Pandemic Governance and Protests in Fishing Villages in South Kerala, India
In this article, we reflect on the consequences of COVID-19 interventions on coastal communities in south Kerala (India), and the responses of the local population to the latter. In particular, we map out the events which led to spontaneous protests in a number of fishing villages during the second wave of the epidemic in July 2020. We will show that whilst during the first wave of the epidemic, coastal communities remained supportive of government intervention, such an initial support begun to wane as the epidemic unfolded over time and became more aggressive and widespread. We argue that such a shift in fishing communities’ attitudes was a response not only to the consequences of a more forceful policy of containment of the epidemic but also to a sudden identification of coastal communities as the main locus of contagion in the district. We suggest that the consequent restrictive measures enforced on coastal communities were driven as much by epidemiological concerns as by a media-driven social panic built upon widespread negative stereotypes that have historically worked to marginalize, and even criminalize coastal communities in Kerala. We deploy the notion of bio-moral marginality to reveal ways through which the attribution of specific—and largely stereotyped and negative— physical attributes and moral dispositions to the bodies and behaviour of people belonging to fishing coastal communities constituted the ground upon which the social panic concerning the spread of the COVID-19 virus unfolded in south Kerala, thus leading to fishers’ militant response.
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来源期刊
Journal of South Asian Development
Journal of South Asian Development DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: The Journal of South Asian Development (JSAD) publishes original research papers and reviews of books relating to all facets of development in South Asia. Research papers are usually between 8000 and 12000 words in length and typically combine theory with empirical analysis of historical and contemporary issues and events. All papers are peer reviewed. While the JSAD is primarily a social science journal, it considers papers from other disciplines that deal with development issues. Geographically, the JSAD"s coverage is confined to the South Asian region, which includes India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives and Afghanistan.
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