加拿大华人经历新冠肺炎和种族主义双重流行:对身份认同、负面情绪和反种族主义事件报道的启示

IF 2.9 4区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Canadian Psychology-Psychologie Canadienne Pub Date : 2021-12-16 DOI:10.1037/cap0000305.supp
N. Lou, K. Noels, Shachi Kurl, Ying Shan Doris Zhang, H. Young-Leslie
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引用次数: 11

摘要

自冠状病毒(COVID-19)大流行开始以来,许多华裔加拿大人(cc)经历了越来越多的种族主义和仇外心理。这项研究的重点是,除了疫情本身构成的威胁外,反华歧视的兴起不仅影响了华人的福祉,还影响了他们的华裔和加拿大人身份。我们调查了来自加拿大各地的874名CC成年人,M(年龄)= 42.09;47.7%为女性;628名外国出生,第一代(G1)和246名加拿大出生,第二代或更晚(G2)。报告的歧视经历率令人震惊:超过一半的受访者报告说,他们因种族而受到不那么尊重(G1: 60.6%;G2: 56.8%),超过三分之一的受访者报告说,他们曾受到个人威胁或恐吓(G1: 35.2%;G2: 39.8%)。代际地位调节了cc的大流行经历,例如,G1级cc感受到更多的健康、经济和文化威胁,但G2级cc报告了更多的个人和群体歧视。即使在控制了大流行威胁之后,感知到的歧视也与CCs的负面影响有关。这种类型的歧视对遗产和主流文化身份有不同的影响。个人歧视与加拿大人认同呈负相关,而群体歧视与中国人认同呈正相关。只有约10%遭受骚扰的cc向当局或在社交媒体上报告了他们的遭遇;cc认为其他人将他们视为永久的外国人,这削弱了他们对骚扰的报告。研究结果对文化适应、身份认同、反种族主义策略和报告骚扰的授权的影响进行了讨论。新冠肺炎疫情给所有加拿大人带来了各种威胁,但华裔加拿大人也面临着越来越多的种族主义。例如,本研究发现,三分之二的受访者在大流行期间受到不尊重的对待,超过三分之一的受访者受到公开威胁或骚扰。这种歧视不仅损害了加拿大华人的身心健康,也损害了他们对加拿大社会的归属感。代际地位影响了与大流行相关的挑战的相对影响,例如,外国出生的华裔加拿大人经历了更多的健康、经济和文化威胁,而加拿大出生的华裔则感受到更多的个人和群体歧视。由于对华裔加拿大人的偏见和歧视可能继续存在,研究和社会共同努力打击种族主义,鼓励反种族主义报道,支持华裔和其他亚裔加拿大人抵御和恢复疫情,面临着持续的挑战。
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Supplemental Material for Chinese Canadians’ Experiences of the Dual Pandemics of COVID-19 and Racism: Implications for Identity, Negative Emotion, and Anti-Racism Incident Reporting
Many Chinese Canadians (CCs) have experienced increased racism and xenophobia since the beginning of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. This study focused on how this rise of anti-Chinese discrimination, in addition to the threats posed by the pandemic itself, affects not only CCs' well-being, but also their Chinese and Canadian identities. We surveyed 874 CC adults from across Canada, M (age) = 42.09;47.7% females;628 foreign-born, first-generation (G1) and 246 Canadian-born, second or later generation (G2). The reported rates of discriminatory experiences were alarming: More than half of the respondents reported that they had been treated with less respect because of their ethnicity (G1: 60.6%;G2: 56.8%), and over a third reported that they had been personally threatened or intimidated (G1: 35.2%;G2: 39.8%). Generational status moderated CCs' pandemic experiences, such that G1 CCs perceived more health, financial, and cultural threats due to the pandemic, but G2 CCs reported more personal and group discrimination. Perceived discrimination was associated with CCs' negative affect even after controlling for pandemic threats. The type of discrimination had different implications for heritage and mainstream cultural identities. For both groups, personal discrimination was negatively associated with Canadian identity, whereas group discrimination was positively associated with Chinese identity. Only about 10% of CCs who experienced harassment reported their encounters to authorities or on social media;CCs' perceptions that others saw them as perpetual foreigners undermined their reporting of harassment. The findings' implications for acculturation, identity, anti-racism strategies, and empowerment in reporting harassment are discussed. Public Significance Statement COVID-19 pandemic poses various threats for all Canadians, but Chinese Canadians have also faced increased racism. For example, the present study found that two-thirds of respondents had been treated disrespectfully and over a third were openly threatened or harassed during the pandemic. As a result of this discrimination, not only is Chinese Canadians' physical and psychological well-being undermined, but also their sense of belonging to Canadian society. Generational status affected the relative impact of pandemic-related challenges, such that foreign-born Chinese Canadians experienced more health, financial, and cultural threats, whereas Canadian-born Chinese perceived more personal and group discrimination. As the prejudice and discrimination against Chinese Canadians are likely to continue, there are ongoing challenges for research and the community to work together in combating racism, encouraging anti-racism reporting, and supporting Chinese and other Asian Canadians' resilience and recovery from the pandemic.
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来源期刊
Canadian Psychology-Psychologie Canadienne
Canadian Psychology-Psychologie Canadienne PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
2.20%
发文量
51
期刊介绍: Canadian Psychology has a mandate to present generalist articles in areas of theory, research, and practice that are potentially of interest to a broad cross-section of psychologists. Manuscripts with direct relevance to the context of Canadian psychology are also appropriate for submission. Original, empirical contributions are not within the mandate of the journal, unless the research is of direct relevance to the discipline as a whole (e.g., a survey of psychologists about the future of the discipline).
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