Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Can Rev Sociol ; 60(4): 542-566, 2023 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37698323

ABSTRACT

Significant socio-economic, health, and mental health disparities due to highly entrenched and systemic anti-Black racism in Canadian institutions, policies, and practices are now well documented in research and policy reports. Yet, few in-depth studies have addressed the mental health impacts of anti-Black racism on Canadian populations. This article is rooted in a community-based, qualitative research project with young first and second-generation Black Caribbean-Canadian mothers and is informed by Black Feminist epistemologies and intersectional theories and methodologies. Our research demonstrates how participants' childhood experiences with xenophobic and racist immigration policies and educational, child welfare, and childcare systems caused their future mental health challenges as young Black mothers, and how these struggles were exacerbated by their encounters with the racist, ageist, xenophobic medical, social, and mental health services they had to access as young mothers. Based on these findings, we recommend enhancements to current social policies to minimize the differential mental health impacts on young Black Canadian mothers.


Les rapports de recherche et de politique documentent d'importantes disparités socio-économiques, sanitaires et mentales dues au racisme anti-Noir systémique et fortement enraciné dans les institutions, les politiques et les pratiques canadiennes. Pourtant, peu d'études approfondies se sont penchées sur les effets du racisme anti-Noirs sur la santé mentale des populations canadiennes. Cet article s'appuie sur un projet de recherche qualitative communautaire mené auprès de jeunes mères canadiennes noires des Caraïbes de première et de deuxième génération, et s'inspire des épistémologies féministes noires ainsi que des théories et méthodologies intersectionnelles. Notre recherche démontre comment les expériences de l'enfance des participantes avec les politiques d'immigration xénophobes et racistes et les systèmes d'éducation, de protection de l'enfance et de garde d'enfants ont causé leurs futurs problèmes de santé mentale en tant que jeunes mères noires, et comment ces luttes ont été exacerbées par leurs rencontres avec les services médicaux, sociaux et de santé mentale racistes, âgistes et xénophobes auxquels elles ont dû avoir accès en tant que jeunes mères. Sur la base de ces résultats, nous recommandons d'améliorer les politiques sociales actuelles afin de minimiser les impacts différentiels sur la santé mentale des jeunes mères noires canadiennes.


Subject(s)
Black People , Mothers , Racism , Female , Humans , Black People/psychology , Canada , Mothers/psychology , Public Policy
2.
Violence Against Women ; 29(3-4): 580-601, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34894902

ABSTRACT

This phenomenological study, consisting of individual interviews with a sample of 30 women engaged in sex work, examines the intimate relationships of women engaged in sex work in Barbados. Participants often entered relationships with men they met while engaged in sex work. Most experienced relationships that became transactional, abusive, and exploitative. Intimate partner violence (IPV) challenged their ability to negotiate condom use with intimate partners placing them at risk for HIV. A cycle emerged of entering relationships to exit the violent conditions of sex work and then re-entering sex work to escape IPV. Implications for mental health, HIV prevention, IPV, and empowerment services are described.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , Intimate Partner Violence , Male , Humans , Female , Sex Work , Barbados , Sexual Behavior , Sexual Partners/psychology , Intimate Partner Violence/psychology , HIV Infections/psychology , Risk Factors
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...