Tomorrow is cancelled: Rethinking nursing resistance as insurrection

Recent events such as the COVID 19 pandemic and racist police violence have contributed to a heightened awareness about the nature and origin of health care disparities. Nurses are portrayed as heroes while expected to work with no equipment, and nursing organizations release antiracist statements,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAporia Vol. 13; no. 1; pp. 15 - 25
Main Authors Smith, Kylie M., Foth, Thomas
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published University of Ottawa 21.01.2021
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Summary:Recent events such as the COVID 19 pandemic and racist police violence have contributed to a heightened awareness about the nature and origin of health care disparities. Nurses are portrayed as heroes while expected to work with no equipment, and nursing organizations release antiracist statements, while little is done to address the underlying conditions that cause disparities. In this paper, we engage with ideas from The Invisible Committee and other theorists to suggest that nursing needs to develop new ways of thinking about both its past and its present politics if any chance of a radical new future is possible.
ISSN:1918-1345
1918-1345
DOI:10.18192/aporia.v13i1.5263