“…For instance, the spike in anti-Asian sentiments and crimes in the US, rising anti-Muslim discrimination in the Americas and India, health disparities for people of color (esp in settler-colonial contexts such as the US, UK, Australia), and ageism and ableism globally. Precarious workers, often racial minorities or impoverished members of a community, such as those in domestic service, migrant laborers, farmworkers, food preparers, were particularly hard hit when businesses shut down or they were pushed out of their jobs (Swan, 2020), or were forced to continue to work under risky circumstances (Teixeira, 2020). Many precarious labor force workers were unable to send remittances to their families overseas or were forced to leave their countries of employment; ethnic minorities and migrants have faced greater exposures from crowded living arrangements, lack of healthcare access, stigmatization and exclusion based on race, ethnicity, and migrant status (International Organisation on Migration (IOM), 2020).…”