Department of Health Management & Policy, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 440 North Harvey, Plymouth, MI 48170, USA.
Soc Work Public Health. 2012;27(6):567-603. doi: 10.1080/19371910903253236.
The authors examine African American African American and White socioeconomic and infant mortality outcomes in Genesee County, Michigan, assess the stated effects of the Undoing Racism Workshop (URW) on its participants and the greater-Genesee County community, and introduce the ecological approach to the cycle of socialization as a tool to help identify sources of racially linked tension and sites for ameliorative intervention. Findings show that African Americans in Flint are geographically and socioeconomically isolated, have fewer resources to sustain health, and experience higher rates of infant mortality when compared to Whites in Flint's surrounding suburbs. Between two thirds and three fourths of URW follow-up survey respondents endorse the belief that the URW can help reduce infant mortality, and results suggest the workshop helps elicit individual and institutional/policy-related changes intended to lessen the disparity. Authors assert the URW offers a common language and framework for discussing racism as a structural phenomenon rather than merely racial prejudice within individuals.
作者考察了密歇根州杰纳西县的非裔美国人和白人民众的社会经济和婴儿死亡率的结果,评估了反种族主义研讨会(URW)对其参与者和更大的杰纳西县社区的既定影响,并引入了生态方法来研究社会化的循环,以此作为一种工具,帮助识别与种族有关的紧张局势的根源和改善干预的场所。研究结果表明,弗林特的非裔美国人在地理上和社会经济上处于孤立状态,维持健康的资源较少,与弗林特周边郊区的白人相比,婴儿死亡率更高。URW 后续调查的三分之二到四分之三的受访者表示相信 URW 可以帮助降低婴儿死亡率,结果表明该研讨会有助于促使个人和机构/政策相关的变化,以减少差距。作者断言,URW 提供了一种共同的语言和框架,用于讨论种族主义作为一种结构性现象,而不仅仅是个人内部的种族偏见。