Koç University.
University of Amsterdam.
Disasters. 2021 Dec;45 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S240-S263. doi: 10.1111/disa.12498. Epub 2021 Sep 22.
Peering through a lens of disasters and inequalities, this article measures the financial impacts of Covid-19 on citizens and refugee communities in Turkey during a relatively early phase of the global pandemic. Our data comes from an online survey (N = 1749) conducted simultaneously with Turkish citizens and Syrian refugees living in Turkey, followed by in-depth online interviews with Syrian refugees. Our findings indicate that the initial Covid-19 measures had a higher financial impact on Syrians than on citizens when controlled for employment, wealth, and education, among other variables. In line with the literature, our research confirms that disasters' socio-economic effects disproportionally burden minority communities. We additionally discuss how Covid-19 measures have significantly accelerated effects on refugees compared to the local population, mainly due to the structural and policy context within which forcibly displaced Syrians have been received in Turkey.
从灾难和不平等的角度来看,本文在全球大流行的早期阶段,衡量了新冠疫情对土耳其公民和难民社区的经济影响。我们的数据来自于一项同时针对土耳其公民和居住在土耳其的叙利亚难民进行的在线调查(N=1749),随后对叙利亚难民进行了深入的在线访谈。我们的研究结果表明,在控制了就业、财富和教育等变量后,最初的新冠疫情措施对叙利亚人的财务影响比对土耳其公民的更大。与文献一致,我们的研究证实,灾难的社会经济影响不成比例地给少数族裔社区带来负担。我们还讨论了新冠疫情措施如何与当地人口相比,对难民产生了更大的影响,这主要是由于土耳其接收被迫流离失所的叙利亚人所处的结构性和政策背景。