Abstract

Throughout the Americas, most Indigenous people move through urban areas and make their homes in cities. Yet, the specific issues and concerns facing Indigenous people in cities, and the positive protective factors their vibrant urban communities generate are often overlooked and poorly understood. This has been particularly so under COVID-19 pandemic conditions. In the spring of 2020, the United Nations High Commissioner Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples called for information on the impacts of COVID-19 for Indigenous peoples. We took that opportunity to provide a response focused on urban Indigenous communities in the United States and Canada. Here, we expand on that response and Indigenous and human rights lens to review policies and practices impacting the experience of COVID-19 for urban Indigenous communities. Our analysis integrates a discussion of historical and ongoing settler colonialism, and the strengths of Indigenous community-building, as these shape the urban Indigenous experience with COVID-19. Mindful of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, we highlight the perspectives of Indigenous organizations which are the lifeline of urban Indigenous communities, focusing on challenges that miscounting poses to data collection and information sharing, and the exacerbation of intersectional discrimination and human rights infringements specific to the urban context. We include Indigenous critiques of the implications of structural oppressions exposed by COVID-19, and the resulting recommendations which have emerged from Indigenous urban adaptations to lockdown isolation, the provision of safety, and delivery of services grounded in Indigenous initiatives and traditional practices.

Highlights

  • The deadly Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic laid bare gaps in national and local public health care policies, including missing data, that neglect specific issues and concerns facing Indigenous peoples in cities in both the United States (US) and Canada

  • The urban Indigenous experience with COVID-19 is shaped by historical and ongoing settler colonial actions which violate Indigenous human rights and are sustained through intersectional forms of systemic oppression and discrimination which exacerbate mistrust

  • The RISIU assembled information on the impacts of COVID-19 for urban Indigenous communities in nineteen countries of the Americas and was one of over 150 submissions received. In his UN report, the Special Rapporteur confirmed that Indigenous peoples were “the most harshly affected” by COVID-19 even though they only represent 6% of the world population because, Indigenous societies, already facing numerous existential threats, face higher risks of dying of the disease, of experiencing discrimination and a disproportionate impact as a result of confinement measures, and of being left without support to defend their peoples from intensifying rights violations even as the pandemic rages . . . COVID-19 has created an unprecedented wave of fear, sadness and hardship around the globe, yet indigenous peoples feel forgotten and left behind (UN General Assembly, 2020: 5)

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Summary

Frontiers in Sociology

Lobo S (2021) Concrete Lessons: Policies and Practices Affecting the Impact of COVID-19 for Urban Indigenous Communities in the United States and Canada. The specific issues and concerns facing Indigenous people in cities, and the positive protective factors their vibrant urban communities generate are often overlooked and poorly understood. This has been so under COVID-19 pandemic conditions. We expand on that response and Indigenous and human rights lens to review policies and practices impacting the experience of COVID-19 for urban Indigenous communities.

INTRODUCTION
UNITED STATES AND CANADIAN URBAN INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES IN HEMISPHERIC CONTEXT
Accessing Health Care
PANDEMIC COLONIALISM IN CANADA
Disseminating Information to Urban Indigenous Communities in Canada
Urban Indigenous Input on National Response and Programs that Affect Them
Urban Indigenous Initiatives and Traditional Practices
CONCLUSIONS AND ACTIONABLE RECOMMENDATIONS
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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