id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-337796-6qs6m7h7 Della Rosa, Asia What does COVID‐19 distract us from? A migration studies perspective on the inequities of attention 2020-05-18 .txt text/plain 280 25 64 key: cord-337796-6qs6m7h7 cord_uid: 6qs6m7h7 In our spaces of exclusion from wealth and rights, now absent from public discourse, it is in the camps where COVID-19 will be most deadly (Oishi and Alam 2020) , and yet migrants themselves are already being constructed as potential public health risks. These spaces of exclusion, exposure and condemnation to suffering this disease have no public health infrastructure nor hope of practising 'social distancing' (Médecins sans Frontières 2020). These people are those whose suffering we long ago decided to distance ourselves from socially. Against ascendant and narrow nationalisms, we must respond with a mass mobilisation of care and the evacuation of these spaces of exception cum graveyards. Why don't health care frontline professionals do more for segregated Roma? Evacuation of squalid Greek camps more urgent than ever over COVID-19 fears Discrimination as a health systems response to forced migration ./cache/cord-337796-6qs6m7h7.txt ./txt/cord-337796-6qs6m7h7.txt