Bradley Olson’s research while affiliated with National Louis University and other places

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Publications (1)


A community psychology for migrant justice: Critically examining border violence and resistance during the COVID-19 syndemic
  • Article

May 2023

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65 Reads

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6 Citations

American Journal of Community Psychology

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Moshood Olanrewaju

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[...]

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Bradley Olson

This article explores the magnifying lenses of the COVID-19 syndemic to highlight how people racialized as migrants and refugees have been-and continue to be-disproportionally harmed. We use empirical evidence collected in our scholarly/activist work in Europe, Africa, South Asia, and the United States to examine migrant injustice as being produced by a combination of power structures and relations working to maintain colonial global orders and inequalities. This is what has been defined as "border imperialism." Our data, complemented by evidence from transnational solidarity groups, show that border imperialism has further intersected with the hygienic-sanitary logics of social control at play during the COVID-19 period. This intersection has resulted in increasingly coercive methods of restraining people on the move, as well as in increased-and new-forms of degradation of their lives, that is, an overall multiplication of border violences. At the same time, however, COVID-19 has provided a unique opportunity for grassroot solidarity initiatives and resistance led by people on the move to be amplified and extended. We conclude by emphasizing the need for community psychologists to take a more vigorous stance against oppressive border imperialist regimes and the related forms of violence they re/enact.

Citations (1)


... In a recent article we co-authored with fellow scholar-activists (see Esposito et al., 2024) we argued that understanding borders and border-making processes entails recognising them as integral components of a broader and enduring system of racial capitalism (Robinson, 1983). 2 Borders "enforce people's relationships with nationstates and national economies, purposefully rendering those who are racialised as migrants and refugees more vulnerable to exploitative, abusive and dehumanising conditions (Gahman & Hjalmarson, 2019)" (Esposito et al., 2024, p. 29). From this standpoint, borders are not just "fixed or static lines" but rather "productive regimes concurrently generated by and producing social relations of dominance" (Walia, 2021, p. 6). ...

Reference:

Challenging Borders and Border Violence: A Decolonial Community Psychology Perspective
A community psychology for migrant justice: Critically examining border violence and resistance during the COVID-19 syndemic
  • Citing Article
  • May 2023

American Journal of Community Psychology