4.2 Article

Worksites as Sacrifice Zones: Structural Precarity and COVID-19 in US Meatpacking

Journal

SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES
Volume 64, Issue 5, Pages 726-746

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/07311214211012025

Keywords

agrifood systems; COVID-19; environmental justice; global and transnational sociology; labor and labor movements; racial and ethnic minorities

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellowship [1810179]
  2. College of Liberal Arts at Colorado State University
  3. SBE Off Of Multidisciplinary Activities
  4. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie [1810179] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This article focuses on the importance of meatpacking facilities during COVID-19, examining the impact of claims from environmental justice and agrifood scholars on the industry. The authors found that industry and government leverage existing socio-ecological inequalities to ensure the continuity of the meatpacking supply chain, but at the cost of neglecting the harm caused to workers.
As meatpacking facilities became COVID-19 hotspots, the pandemic renewed the importance of longstanding claims from environmental justice and agrifood scholars. The former asserts the perceived dispensability of marginalized populations sustains environmental injustices, whereas the latter stresses that decades of industrial consolidation created structural instability in the food supply chain. This article asks how industry and government leverage existing socio-ecological inequalities to ensure the continuity of the meatpacking supply chain during COVID-19, and the implications these actions hold for workers. To answer these questions, the authors perform case studies of meatpacking facilities in three Midwestern states. This article uses the critical environmental justice framework to expand research on sacrifice zones to include hazardous worksites such as meatpacking. We find that toxic employment flourishes through firms labor practices that pass socio-ecological risks onto workers in the name of efficiency, and through a complicit state that prioritizes accumulation and consumption over workers health.

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