Toll of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Primary Caregiver in Yazidi Refugee Families in Canada: A Feminist Refugee Epistemological Analysis

dc.contributor.authorBanerjee, Pallavi
dc.contributor.authorChacko, Soulit
dc.contributor.authorKorsha, Souzan
dc.contributor.departmentSociology, School of Liberal Arts
dc.date.accessioned2024-06-10T09:52:08Z
dc.date.available2024-06-10T09:52:08Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.abstractExisting discourse on refugee resettlement in the West is rife with imperialist and neoliberal allusions. Materially, this discourse assumes refugees as passive recipients of resettlement programs in the host country denying them their subjectivities. Given the amplification of all social and economic inequities during the pandemic, our paper explores how Canada's response to the pandemic vis-a-vis refugees impacted the everyday of Yazidis in Calgary - a recently arrived refugee group who survived the most horrific genocidal atrocities of our times. Based on interviews with Yazidi families in Calgary and with resettlement staff we unpack Canada's paternalistic response to COVID-19 toward refugees. We show how resettlement provisions and social isolation along with pre-migration histories have furthered the conditions of social, economic, and affective inequities for the Yazidis. We also show how Yazidi women who were most impacted by the genocide and the subsequent pandemic find ways of asserting their personhood and engage in healing through a land-based resettlement initiative during the pandemic. Adopting a Feminist Refugee Epistemology and a southern moral imaginary as our discursive lenses, we highlight the need to dismantle the existing paternalistic structures and re(orient) resettlement practices and praxis to a social justice framework centering the voices of refugee women and families in their resettlement process.
dc.eprint.versionFinal published version
dc.identifier.citationBanerjee P, Chacko S, Korsha S. Toll of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Primary Caregiver in Yazidi Refugee Families in Canada: A Feminist Refugee Epistemological Analysis. Studies in Social Justice. 2022;16(1):33-53. doi:10.26522/ssj.v16i1.2692
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1805/41312
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherBrock University
dc.relation.isversionof10.26522/ssj.v16i1.2692
dc.relation.journalStudies in Social Justice
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internationalen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.sourcePublisher
dc.subjectRefugee settlement
dc.subjectGender
dc.subjectDecolonial analysis
dc.subjectYazidis
dc.subjectRohingya
dc.subjectCOVID-19
dc.titleToll of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Primary Caregiver in Yazidi Refugee Families in Canada: A Feminist Refugee Epistemological Analysis
dc.typeArticle
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