Pandemic Racism in Australia: A Systematic Review
Abstract
. The COVID-19 pandemic has given rise to diverse manifestations of
racism in Australia, from everyday attacks against Asian Australians
to discriminatory policies towards temporary migrants. Since the
start of the pandemic, considerable knowledge on pandemicrelated racism has been produced. This knowledge has yet to be
consolidated, leaving questions about the nature, forms, impacts
and trajectories of racism during the pandemic. This paper presents
a systematic review and synthesis of research on racism during the
pandemic, with an emphasis on pandemic-specific racism. We
searched the databases Scopus, MEDLINE and PsycINFO for
research published between January 2020 and July 2022. Eighteen
research studies were included in the review, along with reports of
routine data collection by five organisations. The research reviewed
collected data mainly around the pandemic’s ‘second wave’ in
Australia (June-October 2020), focusing largely on Asian Australians
and temporary migrants nationally and in Victoria. Widely studied
forms of COVID-racism were verbal abuse, physical attacks,
exclusion and Othering, and institutional racism involving
governments, media and employers. We examined the pandemic’s
health and socio-economic impacts, and variations in experiences
of racism over time between ethnic groups. As Australia emerges
from the pandemic, we consider the review’s implications for
pandemic response, anti-racism practice and policy, and future
research.
Pandemic Racism in Australia: A Systematic Review
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
0725-6868Palabras Clave
.Racism; pandemic racism; discrimination; COVID-19 pandemic; systematic review; Australia