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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Anti-Asian Hate Crime During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Exploring the Reproduction of Inequality

TLDR
COVID-19 has enabled the spread of racism and created national insecurity, fear of foreigners, and general xenophobia, which may be related to the increase in anti-Asian hate crimes during the pandemic.
Abstract
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) is believed to have emerged in Wuhan, China in late December 2019 and began rapidly spreading around the globe throughout the spring months of 2020. As COVID-19 proliferated across the United States, Asian Americans reported a surge in racially motivated hate crimes involving physical violence and harassment. Throughout history, pandemic-related health crises have been associated with the stigmatization and “othering” of people of Asian descent. Asian Americans have experienced verbal and physical violence motivated by individual-level racism and xenophobia from the time they arrived in America in the late 1700s up until the present day. At the institutional level, the state has often implicitly reinforced, encouraged, and perpetuated this violence through bigoted rhetoric and exclusionary policies. COVID-19 has enabled the spread of racism and created national insecurity, fear of foreigners, and general xenophobia, which may be related to the increase in anti-Asian hate crimes during the pandemic. We examine how these crimes – situated in historically entrenched and intersecting individual-level and institutional-level racism and xenophobia – have operated to “other” Asian Americans and reproduce inequality.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Lancet Commission on lessons for the future from the COVID-19 pandemic

TL;DR: The COVID-19 Commission report as mentioned in this paper provides a conceptual framework for understanding pandemics and proposes guideposts for strengthening the multilateral system to address global emergencies and to achieve sustainable development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anti-Asian discrimination and the Asian-white mental health gap during COVID-19

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider how, due to a spike in anti-Asian hate crimes, Asians might face a disproportionate mental health impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Posted Content

Racism is a Virus: Anti-Asian Hate and Counterhate in Social Media during the COVID-19 Crisis

TL;DR: Analysis of the social network reveals that hateful and counterspeech users interact and engage extensively with one another, instead of living in isolated polarized communities, and finds that nodes were highly likely to become hateful after being exposed to hateful content in the year 2020.
Journal ArticleDOI

Racism and nationalism during and beyond the COVID-19 pandemic

TL;DR: Racism and xenophobia associated with the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic disproportionately affect migrants and minority groups worldwide as discussed by the authors, and exacerbate existing patterns of discrimination and inequality.
References
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Book

Metaphors We Live By

TL;DR: Lakoff and Johnson as mentioned in this paper suggest that these basic metaphors not only affect the way we communicate ideas, but actually structure our perceptions and understandings from the beginning, and they offer an intriguing and surprising guide to some of the most common metaphors and what they can tell us about the human mind.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metaphors We Live by

TL;DR: Lakoff and Johnson as discussed by the authors present a very attractive book for linguists to read, which is written in a direct and accessible style; while it introduces and uses a number of new terms, for the most part it is free of jargon.
Book

In the Name of Hate: Understanding Hate Crimes

Barbara Perry
TL;DR: The Violence of Hatred and Permission to Hate:Ethnoviolence and the State and Doing Gender Inappropriately:Doing Difference Differently are cited.
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