Literature DB >> 21847845

Stigmatized ethnicity, public health, and globalization.

S Harris Ali.   

Abstract

The prejudicial linking of infection with ethnic minority status has a long-established history, but in some ways this association may have intensified under the contemporary circumstances of the "new public health" and globalization. This study analyzes this conflation of ethnicity and disease victimization by considering the stigmatization process that occurred during the 2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in Toronto. The attribution of stigma during the SARS outbreak occurred in multiple and overlapping ways informed by: (i) the depiction of images of individuals donning respiratory masks; (ii) employment status in the health sector; and (iii) Asian-Canadian and Chinese-Canadian ethnicity. In turn, stigmatization during the SARS crisis facilitated a moral panic of sorts in which racism at a cultural level was expressed and rationalized on the basis of a rhetoric of the new public health and anti-globalization sentiments. With the former, an emphasis on individualized self-protection, in the health sense, justified the generalized avoidance of those stigmatized. In relation to the latter, in the post-9/11 era, avoidance of the stigmatized other was legitimized on the basis of perceiving the SARS threat as a consequence of the mixing of different people predicated by economic and cultural globalization.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 21847845     DOI: 10.1353/ces.2008.0002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can Ethn Stud        ISSN: 0008-3496


  6 in total

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Authors:  Don C Des Jarlais; Heidi A Bramson; Cherise Wong; Karla Gostnell; Javier Cepeda; Kamyar Arasteh; Holly Hagan
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 6.526

2.  Transnational quarantine rhetorics: public mobilization in SARS and in H1N1 flu.

Authors:  Huiling Ding
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2014-06

3.  Profiling racial prejudice during COVID-19: Who exhibits anti-Asian sentiment in Australia and the United States?

Authors:  Xiao Tan; Rennie Lee; Leah Ruppanner
Journal:  Aust J Soc Issues       Date:  2021-08-22

4.  Contextualizing mobility during the Ebola epidemic in Liberia.

Authors:  Mosoka Fallah; Stephen Lavalah; Tina Gbelia; Myers Zondo; Morris Kromah; Lucy Tantum; Gartee Nallo; Joseph Boakai; Kemoh Sheriff; Laura Skrip; S Harris Ali
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2022-04-20

5.  The Politics of Disease Epidemics: a Comparative Analysis of the SARS, Zika, and Ebola Outbreaks.

Authors:  Lydia Kapiriri; Alison Ross
Journal:  Glob Soc Welf       Date:  2018-09-03

6.  Constructing and Communicating COVID-19 Stigma on Twitter: A Content Analysis of Tweets during the Early Stage of the COVID-19 Outbreak.

Authors:  Yachao Li; Sylvia Twersky; Kelsey Ignace; Mei Zhao; Radhika Purandare; Breeda Bennett-Jones; Scott R Weaver
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-09-19       Impact factor: 3.390

  6 in total

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