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4 - Social-Distancing the Settler-State: Indigenous Peoples in the Age of COVID-19

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2021

Glenn W. Muschert
Affiliation:
Khalifa University of Science and Technology
Kristen M. Budd
Affiliation:
Miami University
David C. Lane
Affiliation:
Illinois State University
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Summary

The Problem

The global spread of COVID-19 is quickly exacerbating existing racial and economic disparities, and in its wake, revealing the spatial dynamics of health and interlocking social inequalities that burden marginalized communities. Among Indigenous Peoples, increased risk of exposure is linked to the enduring settler-colonial logics of Indigenous elimination and present-day mistreatment of tribal communities by settler-states that occupy their lands. Specifically, Indigenous communities face social problems such as access to quality, affordable healthcare, sustainable public infrastructure, opportunities for economic self-sufficiency, nutritious food, and clean water. Relatedly, Indigenous cultures and languages are often stigmatized and othered, which may dissuade some Indigenous Peoples from seeking out medical and social services when in need.

Indigenous Peoples are collectively identified as those communities that lived on and cared for a particular land base before the arrival of foreign settlers, inhabitants that routinely threatened Indigenous communities with death, disease, and destruction. Despite those efforts, there are upwards of 400–500 million Indigenous Peoples living around the world today. These communities nourish distinct languages, cultural perspectives, legal systems, and actively resist threats to their knowledge systems from settler societies. In 2020, COVID-19 amplified these threats across the globe. In the Americas, for example, 40 percent of Indigenous Peoples do not have access to conventional healthcare (Cevallos and Amores, 2009) and 73 percent of Canada's First Nations’ water systems are at risk of contamination (Council of Canadians, 2020). Recent reports from Brazil show that predatory resource extraction (timber, water, mining) in Indigenous territories persists during the pandemic, compounding local risk of exposure. Ongoing, comprehensive, and disaggregated data on the rate and effects of COVID-19 infections are urgently needed to combat these ongoing threats. Universal solutions to protect and support Indigenous communities, however, cannot be fully realized without sufficient attention to the social and historical context of settler colonialism. In many cases, current evidence suggests that Indigenous Peoples, and the future safety of tribal communities, may be best served by maintaining social and physical distance from the settler-state.

Type
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Information
Social Problems in the Age of COVID-19 Vol 2
Volume 2: Global Perspectives
, pp. 39 - 50
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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