2022
DOI: 10.1111/maq.12732
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“There Would Be More Black Spaces”: Care/giving Cartographies during COVID‐19

Abstract: Black geographies, Black feminist anthropology, and related fields have provided substantial evidence attesting to the effects of racially violent spatial practices such as dispossession, racial segregation, mass incarceration, and redlining for the health outcomes and life chances of Black communities and other racialized groups, and conversely, the political and healing potential of placemaking projects. We foreground theory from Black geographies and Black feminist work on care to examine care/giving cartog… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Still others have raised questions about the limitations of working within conventional systems of science and governance to achieve community health. Carney et al (2022) describe a coalition of academics and activists working in Tucson, Arizona, during the COVID-19 pandemic who are calling on the need to address anti-Blackness embedded within existing health systems. Activist Karen Washington has argued that when it comes to improving community health it is not a "seat at the table" that is needed but an abolitionist politics that upholds forms of nourishment not dictated by settler colonialism and slavery (Washington cited in Carney 2021).…”
Section: Interpositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Still others have raised questions about the limitations of working within conventional systems of science and governance to achieve community health. Carney et al (2022) describe a coalition of academics and activists working in Tucson, Arizona, during the COVID-19 pandemic who are calling on the need to address anti-Blackness embedded within existing health systems. Activist Karen Washington has argued that when it comes to improving community health it is not a "seat at the table" that is needed but an abolitionist politics that upholds forms of nourishment not dictated by settler colonialism and slavery (Washington cited in Carney 2021).…”
Section: Interpositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The corresponding global health research increasingly treats such communities’ participation as a political imperative, but, crucially, not as an epistemological one (Biehl 2016). In this apparatus, the limited notion of science presumed in such interventions contributes to further entrenching biopolitical processes that leave racialized populations disproportionately vulnerable to disease and death (Carney, Chess, and Rascon–Canales 2022; Davis 2019; Mbembe 2017). The failure to apprehend the validity and value of embodied experimentations targets for destruction not only individual people but also their practices and the forms of life within which they are embedded (Stengers 2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%