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1.
International Social Work ; : 00208728211011627, 2021.
Article in English | Sage | ID: covidwho-1234448

ABSTRACT

Authoritarian populism that fosters deep hate of ?Others? and a desire for obedience and order, has attacked the fundamental principles of social work and democracy. During the global health crisis, another global pandemic ? xeno or racism ? is evoked to corroborate authoritarian populism. We critically analyze the dynamics of populism that shift the focus from ?people? to ?problems? and how it has been intensified during COVID-19. Using narrative justice as a guiding framework, we invite social workers to critically reflect on how this politics has impacted marginalized populations and injuries done to democracy and how social workers can contribute constructing social justice narratives.

2.
Critical Sociology ; : 08969205211000116, 2021.
Article in English | Sage | ID: covidwho-1166842

ABSTRACT

Since COVID-19, we have witnessed a rise in hate crimes and xenoracism globally. Some commentators on COVID-related racism claim that this hate is apolitical. We question this claim, and in this paper, we strive to reveal the underlying politics especially around the ramifications and impact of this hate on racialized (im)migrants and the multiculturalism ideal. Drawing from Foucault?s construct of biopolitics and using Canada as a case study, we wonder how Canadian multiculturalism, which is a source of national pride, has been politically constructed to serve white settler hegemony from its inception to the present. We link political debates around the emergence of a multiculturalism policy in 1971 to the recent debates on multiculturalism and immigration during the 2015 and 2019 federal elections, and the current COVID-19 related national border policies in 2020. Our critical analysis illustrates how immigrants and racialized minorities have been systemically positioned in our legislation as a site to demonstrate the politics of governance, often scapegoated for national unrest and questioned on the legitimacy of their belonging and contribution to the nation. Meanwhile, the very ideal of multiculturalism in Canada has been evoked as the centre of biopolitics to govern ?Others? and all.

3.
Qual Soc Work ; 20(1-2): 225-232, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-937011

ABSTRACT

Following the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a pandemic in March 2020, a state of emergency was announced in many countries. This has had significant impacts on individuals, communities, and various systems-as-whole locally, nationally and globally. Among the various impacts the pandemic has on people, we would like to invite social workers who deeply care about social justice and equity to pause and reflect on how some populations are unjustly subject to pandemic related stigma and racism; how racist politics play out to maintain extreme nationalism and exclusion; and how we can resist these politics of the pandemic to foster humanity and equity.

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