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The wounds that do not heal: Black expendability and the traumatizing aftereffects of anti-Black police violence

Ingrid R.G. Waldron (School of Nursing, Faculty of Health Professions, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada)

Equality, Diversity and Inclusion

ISSN: 2040-7149

Article publication date: 14 September 2020

Issue publication date: 25 January 2021

3813

Abstract

Purpose

The murders of Black people at the hands of police in 2020 have led to global protests that have called on public officials to defund or abolish the police. What has been drowned out in these conversations, however, is the traumatizing aftereffects of anti-Black police violence as a public health crisis. In this paper, I argue that the racial terrorism of anti-Black police violence is a deeply felt wound in Black communities that extends beyond the individuals who directly experience it and that this type of collective trauma must be understood as an urgent public health crisis.

Design/methodology/approach

Using published studies and online commentaries on anti-Black police violence and its mental health impacts in Canada and the United States, this paper examines the mental health impacts of anti-Black police violence at both the individual and community levels.

Findings

A public health response to the traumatizing aftereffects of anti-Black police violence and other forms of state violence must highlight important policy imperatives, such as policies of action focused on improving the public health system. It must also encompass a recognition that the public health crisis of anti-Black police violence is not solvable solely by public health agencies alone. Rather, strategic opportunities to address this crisis arise at every level of governmental interaction, including law enforcement, health care, employment, business, education and the media.

Originality/value

While the impact of anti-Black police violence on the mental health of Black individuals has been emerging in the literature over the last several years, what has been less focused on and what I address in this paper is how the threat of that violence lingers in Black communities long after the protestors have packed up their megaphones, resulting in collective trauma in Black communities.

Keywords

Citation

Waldron, I.R.G. (2021), "The wounds that do not heal: Black expendability and the traumatizing aftereffects of anti-Black police violence", Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, Vol. 40 No. 1, pp. 29-40. https://doi.org/10.1108/EDI-06-2020-0175

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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