Department of Global Health and Population, School of Public Health, Harvard University, Boston, MA, United States.
Division of Global Health Equity, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2023 Jul 11;11:1137428. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1137428. eCollection 2023.
Indigenous people suffer earlier death and more frequent and severe disease than their settler counterparts, a remarkably persistent reality over time, across settler colonized geographies, and despite their ongoing resistance to elimination. Although these health inequities are well-known, they have been impervious to comprehensive and convincing explication, let alone remediation. Settler colonial studies, a fast-growing multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary field, is a promising candidate to rectify this impasse. Settler colonialism's relationship to health inequity is at once obvious and incompletely described, a paradox arising from epistemic coloniality and perceived analytic challenges that we address here in three parts. First, in considering settler colonialism an enduring structure rather than a past event, and by wedding this fundamental insight to the ascendant structural paradigm for understanding health inequities, a picture emerges in which this system of power serves as a foundational and ongoing configuration determining social and political mechanisms that impose on human health. Second, because modern racialization has served to solidify and maintain the hierarchies of colonial relations, settler colonialism adds explanatory power to racism's health impacts and potential amelioration by historicizing this process for differentially racialized groups. Finally, advances in structural racism methodologies and the work of a few visionary scholars have already begun to elucidate the possibilities for a body of literature linking settler colonialism and health, illuminating future research opportunities and pathways toward the decolonization required for health equity.
原住民的死亡年龄比定居者更早,患病频率更高,病情也更严重,这种情况随着时间的推移在各个定居者殖民的地区一直存在,尽管原住民一直在努力抵抗被消灭。尽管这些健康不平等现象众所周知,但它们仍然无法得到全面和令人信服的解释,更不用说得到纠正了。快速发展的多学科和跨学科领域——殖民主义研究,是纠正这一僵局的有希望的候选者。殖民主义与健康不平等之间的关系是显而易见的,但却没有得到充分的描述,这是一个源于认识论殖民主义和分析挑战的悖论,我们将在三个部分中对此进行探讨。首先,我们将殖民主义视为一种持久的结构,而不是过去的事件,并将这一基本观点与理解健康不平等的上升结构范式相结合,就会出现这样一幅图景:这种权力体系是一个基础性的、持续存在的配置,决定着对人类健康造成影响的社会和政治机制。其次,由于现代种族主义有助于巩固和维持殖民关系的等级制度,因此通过将这一过程历史化,以不同种族群体为对象,殖民主义为种族主义对健康的影响及其潜在改善提供了更多的解释力。最后,结构种族主义方法论的进步和一些有远见的学者的工作已经开始阐明将殖民主义与健康联系起来的文献的可能性,为未来的研究机会和实现健康公平所需的去殖民化指明了道路。