4.1 Article

LOOKING BACK TO LEAP FORWARD: A FRAMEWORK FOR OPERATIONALIZING THE STRUCTURAL RACISM CONSTRUCT IN MINORITY HEALTH RESEARCH

Journal

ETHNICITY & DISEASE
Volume 31, Issue -, Pages 301-310

Publisher

ETHNICITY & DISEASE, INC
DOI: 10.18865/ed.31.S1.301

Keywords

Structural Racism; Structural Discrimination; Operationalization; Racial/Ethnic; Health

Funding

  1. Population Research Infrastructure Program by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [P2CHD050924]
  2. Population Research Training Grant by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [T32HD007168]
  3. Interdisciplinary Training in Life Course Research Training Grant by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [T32HD091058]
  4. Biostatistics for Research in Environmental Health Training Grant by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [T32ES007018]

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The article highlights the significant impact of structural racism on health inequalities in the United States, presenting a new framework to illustrate the unequal effects of structural racism on health opportunities among different racial and ethnic groups.
Racism is now widely recognized as a fundamental cause of health inequalities in the United States. As such, health scholars have rightly turned their attention toward examining the role of structural racism in fostering morbidity and mortality. However, to date, much of the empirical structural racism-health disparities literature limits the operationalization of structural racism to a single domain or orients the construct around a White/Black racial frame. This operationalization approach is incomprehensive and overlooks the heterogeneity of historical and lived experiences among other racial and ethnic groups. To address this gap, we present a theoretically grounded framework that illuminates core mutually reinforcing domains of structural racism that have stratified opportunities for health in the United States. We catalog instances of structural discrimination that were particularly constraining (or advantageous) to the health of racial and ethnic groups from the late 1400s to present. We then illustrate the utility of this framework by applying it to American Indians or Alaska Natives and discuss the framework's broader implications for empirical health research. This framework should help future scholars across disciplines as they identify and interrogate important laws, policies, and norms that have differentially constrained opportunities for health among racial and ethnic groups.

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