000 01206nab a2200193 4500
003 OSt
005 20220929145419.0
007 cr aa aaaaa
008 220929b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aFinn, Brandon M
_953433
245 _aStructural inequality in the time of COVID-19:
_bUrbanization, segregation, and pandemic control in sub-Saharan Africa/
260 _bsage
_c2020
300 _avol 10, issue 2, 2020 : (217–220 p.).
520 _aThe COVID-19 pandemic exposes countries and people in sub-Saharan Africa to severe risks because of structural global inequalities. There is a simultaneous risk of the use of public health action to enact oppressive governance policies, which is happening in response to COVID-19 in many countries. In this commentary, we use the example of 20th-century pandemic control in pre-apartheid South Africa to illustrate how public health crises can engender oppressive social, economic, and spatial transformations.
700 _aKobayashi, Lindsay C
_953434
773 0 _010527
_916533
_dSage Publications Ltd., 2019
_tDialogues in human geography.
_w(OSt)20840795
_x2043-8214
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/2043820620934310
942 _2ddc
_cART
999 _c13154
_d13154