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Accepted Paper:

Structural barriers and stigma: negotiating Latinx immigrant experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic  
Whitney Duncan (University of Northern Colorado) Kristin Yarris (University of Oregon) Sarah Horton (University of Colorado, Denver)

Paper short abstract:

This paper examines experiences of precarity and care among Latinx immigrants during the COVID-19 pandemic, focusing on how cultural narratives around health disparities have exacerbated social suffering and on innovative policy and programmatic responses that have helped address the crisis.

Paper long abstract:

In this paper, we compare observations from engaged ethnography and participant observation with Latinx immigrants in Colorado and Oregon during the COVID-19 pandemic. In particular, we focus on lived experiences of structural vulnerability, as well as the ways in which COVID-related disparities have become internalized as stigma and have amplified immigrants’ experiences of stress, anxiety, and “aislamiento,” or isolation. Indeed, Latinx immigrants in the US—especially those without legal status and those in mixed-status families—face a range of exclusions, discourses of blame and (un)deservingness, and forms of precarity that have contributed to disproportionate risk, suffering, and fear as the pandemic has unfolded. At the same time, by laying bare blatant injustices and racist exclusions, the pandemic has prompted some Latinx immigrants in our research and advocacy sites to enact new forms of resistance and contestation. We detail the range of ways which, in efforts to stay healthy and to challenge discriminatory portrayals of themselves as either disease carriers unlikely to heed public health warnings or as “public charges,” they insist upon their own rights, worth, belonging, and dignity. Finally, we conclude by discussing some of the ways in which these two U.S. states—and the health and social service organizations working with Latinx communities within them—have attempted to address coronavirus disparities among Latinx communities, showing how particular approaches can assuage short-term suffering and improve access to healthcare and other social supports, while others may create a new set of barriers to access for already marginalized communities.

Panel P24
Global mental health in the age of COVID: lived experience, precarity, and crises of care
  Session 1 Thursday 8 April, 2021, -