In this week’s episode, host Laura Haapio-Kirk is joined by Dr Tamara Dragadze, Dr Igor Cherstich (University College London), and Dr Ashraf Hoque (University College London) to discuss the disproportionate impact COVID-19 has had upon BAME communities, and the implications of this both for society at large, and for anthropology as a discipline.
Why are some BAME communities affected so much worse than mainstream society? What’s missing in the way we’re discussing these issues at the moment? And what can this tell us about the relationship between the individual and the State? In this episode we set out to unpack some of these questions.
Today’s guests combine research expertise in issues surrounding ethnicity, migration and diaspora, political identity, and the role of the State:
At the beginning of the episode, Dr Hoque refers to several public reports on the impact of COVID-19 upon BAME communities. The Office of National Statistics published some initial findings in May 2020; and Public Health England also published their early findings in June 2020. They subsequently published a more comprehensive report after this episode was recorded, in August 2020.
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