Mexican-Origin Women's Construction and Navigation of Racialized Identities: Implications for Health Amid Restrictive Immigrant Policies.

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2022-04-01 DOI:10.1215/03616878-9518665
Alana M W LeBrón, Amy J Schulz, Cindy Gamboa, Angela Reyes, Edna Viruell-Fuentes, Barbara A Israel
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This study examines how Mexican-origin women construct and navigate racialized identities in a postindustrial northern border community during a period of prolonged restrictive immigration and immigrant policies, and it considers mechanisms by which responses to racialization may shape health. This grounded theory analysis involves interviews with 48 Mexican-origin women in Detroit, Michigan, who identified as being in the first, 1.5, or second immigrant generation. In response to institutions and institutional agents using racializing markers to assess their legal status and policing access to health-promoting resources, women engaged in a range of strategies to resist being constructed as an "other." Women used the same racializing markers or symbols of (il)legality that had been used against them as a malleable set of resources to resist processes of racialization and to form, preserve, and affirm their identities. These responses include constructing an authorized immigrant identity, engaging in immigration advocacy, and resisting stigmatizing labels. These strategies may have different implications for health over time. Findings indicate the importance of addressing policies that promulgate or exacerbate racialization of Mexican-origin communities and other communities who experience growth through migration. Such policies include creating pathways to legalization and access to resources that have been invoked in racialization processes, such as state-issued driver's licenses.

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墨西哥裔妇女种族化身份的建构与导航:限制移民政策对健康的影响。
本研究考察了在长期限制移民和移民政策时期,墨西哥裔妇女如何在后工业时代的北部边境社区构建和导航种族化身份,并考虑了对种族化的反应可能影响健康的机制。这一理论分析包括对密歇根州底特律市48名墨西哥裔女性的采访,她们被认为是第一代、第1.5代或第二代移民。针对一些机构和机构代理人使用种族化标记来评估她们的法律地位和监督她们获得促进健康的资源的情况,妇女采取了一系列战略,以抵制被建构为"他者"。妇女使用同样的种族化标记或(非)合法性的符号,这些符号曾经被用来反对她们,作为一套可塑的资源来抵制种族化的过程,形成、保存和确认她们的身份。这些应对措施包括建立合法的移民身份,参与移民宣传,以及抵制污名化的标签。随着时间的推移,这些策略可能对健康产生不同的影响。研究结果表明,解决政策的重要性,这些政策颁布或加剧了墨西哥裔社区和其他通过移民经历增长的社区的种族化。这些政策包括创造合法化的途径,并获得在种族化过程中调用的资源,例如国家颁发的驾驶执照。
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CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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