Callous Cruelty and Blow Back: Immigration and Customs Enforcement Facilities, Riskscapes, and Community Transmission of COVID-19

被引:1
|
作者
Hooks, Gregory [1 ]
Lengefeld, Michael [2 ]
机构
[1] McMaster Univ, Dept Sociol, KTH 624, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada
[2] Widener Univ, Dept Sociol, Chester, PA USA
关键词
riskscape; immigrant detention; callous cruelty; COVID-19; pandemic; BLACK LIVES MATTER; HEALTH; RISK; CONSEQUENCES; INEQUALITIES; PUNISHMENT; DETENTION;
D O I
10.1089/env.2021.0040
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This research builds on and extends critical environmental justice research into carceral spaces. Here, the focus is on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention facilities in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing on the lessons provided by the Black Lives Matter social movement and critical race theory, this research draws connections between the institutionalized racism in the criminal justice system and immigration policies. The nativist and racist rationale for harsh immigration policies asserts that callous treatment of immigrants makes U.S. society safer. However, the blow back from these policies makes U.S. society less secure and degrades the civil and political rights for all. Informed by a riskscape framework, we pursue multiscalar and empirical research into this blow back. Riskscapes encompass different viewpoints on the threat of loss across space, time, individuals, and collectives. More tangibly, in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, ICE detention facilities provided ideal conditions for the infection to spread among the people detained, visitors, and staff. The walls and fences surrounding ICE facilities did not prevent the spread of infection to nearby communities, counties, and regions. Heightened infection rates provide tangible (and tragic) evidence of the blow back from the callousness of U.S. immigration policies in general and of ICE facilities in specific. This synthesis of critical environmental justice and riskscapes literatures lays the foundation for a textured and multi-layered understanding of the unequal and institutional dimensions of risks in and around carceral facilities.
引用
收藏
页码:39 / 57
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Delayed recognition of community transmission of COVID-19 resulting in healthcare worker infections
    Dantes, Raymund B.
    Jones, Tait T.
    Neujahr, David C.
    [J]. INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2021, 42 (12): : 1528 - 1529
  • [42] DIFFUSIVE SEIR MODEL FOR COMMUNITY TRANSMISSION OF COVID-19 EPIDEMICS: APPLICATION TO BRAZIL
    Fitzgibbon, William E.
    Morgan, Jeffrey J.
    Webb, Glenn F.
    Wu, Yixiang
    [J]. MATHEMATICS IN APPLIED SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING, 2021, 2 (04): : 290 - 309
  • [43] Reopening schools in the context of increasing COVID-19 community transmission: The French experience
    Gras-Le Guen, C.
    Cohen, R.
    Rozenberg, J.
    Launay, E.
    Levy-Bruhl, D.
    Delacourt, C.
    [J]. ARCHIVES DE PEDIATRIE, 2021, 28 (03): : 178 - 185
  • [44] Studying the mixed transmission in a community with age heterogeneity: COVID-19 as a case study
    Wang, Xiaoying
    Han, Qing
    Kong, Jude Dzevela
    [J]. INFECTIOUS DISEASE MODELLING, 2022, 7 (02) : 250 - 260
  • [45] Contact tracing reveals community transmission of COVID-19 in New York City
    Pei, Sen
    Kandula, Sasikiran
    Vega, Jaime Cascante
    Yang, Wan
    Foerster, Steffen
    Thompson, Corinne
    Baumgartner, Jennifer
    Ahuja, Shama
    Blaney, Kathleen
    Varma, Jay
    Long, Theodore
    Shaman, Jeffrey
    [J]. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2022, 13 (01)
  • [46] Pathways to community transmission of COVID-19 due to rapid evaporation of respiratory virulets
    Basak, Mitali
    Mitra, Shirsendu
    Bandyopadhyay, Dipankar
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE, 2022, 619 : 229 - 245
  • [47] Strategies to stop and prevent COVID-19 transmission in long-term care facilities (LTCFs)
    Tan, L. F.
    Chua, J. W.
    [J]. QJM-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2021, 114 (02) : 151 - 152
  • [48] Modeling shield immunity to reduce COVID-19 transmission in long-term care facilities
    Lucia-Sanz, Adriana
    Magalie, Andreea
    Rodriguez-Gonzalez, Rogelio
    Leung, Chung-Yin
    Weitz, Joshua S.
    [J]. ANNALS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2023, 77 : 44 - 52
  • [49] Long-term care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic Considerations on the way back to normality
    Gosch, M.
    Altrichter, D.
    Pfluegner, M.
    Frohnhofen, H.
    Steinmann, J.
    Schmude-Basic, I
    Adamek, A.
    Johnscher, I
    Kandler, U.
    Wunner, C.
    Waller, C.
    Speer, R.
    Habboub, B.
    Brons-Daymond, S.
    Schadinger, C.
    Singler, K.
    [J]. ZEITSCHRIFT FUR GERONTOLOGIE UND GERIATRIE, 2021, 54 (04): : 377 - 383
  • [50] A Spatiotemporal Solution to Control COVID-19 Transmission at the Community Scale for Returning to Normalcy: COVID-19 Symptom Onset Risk Spatiotemporal Analysis
    Tong, Chengzhuo
    Shi, Wenzhong
    Zhang, Anshu
    Shi, Zhicheng
    [J]. JMIR PUBLIC HEALTH AND SURVEILLANCE, 2023, 9