Background
Research among people who inject drugs (PWIDs) in the USA and Mexico
has identified a range of adverse health impacts associated with policing of
PWIDs. We employed a mixed methods design to investigate how PWIDs from San
Diego and Mexico experienced policing in Tijuana, and how these interactions
affect PWIDs behavior, stratifying by country of origin.
Methods
In 2012–2014, 575 PWIDs in San Diego, 102 of whom had used
drugs in Mexico in the past six months, were enrolled in the STAHR-II study,
with qualitative interviews conducted with a subsample of 20 who had
recently injected drugs in Mexico. During this period, 735 PWIDs in Tijuana
were also enrolled in the El Cuete-IV study, with qualitative interviews
conducted with a subsample of 20 recently stopped by police. We calculated
descriptive statistics for quantitative variables and conducted thematic
analysis of qualitative transcripts. Integration of these data involved
comparing frequencies across cohorts and using qualitative themes to explain
and explore findings.
Results
Sixty-one percent of San Diego-based participants had been recently
stopped by law enforcement officers (LEOs) in Mexico; 53% reported
it was somewhat or very likely that they would be arrested
while in Mexico because they look like a drug user. Ninety percent of
Tijuana-based participants had been recently stopped by LEOs; 84%
reported it was somewhat or very likely they could get
arrested because they look like a drug user. Participants in both cohorts
described bribery and targeting by LEOs in Mexico. However, most San
Diego-based participants described compliance with bribery as a safeguard
against arrest and detention, with mistreatment being rare. Tijuana-based
participants described being routinely targeted by LEOs, were frequently
detained, and reported instances of sexual and physical violence.
Tijuana-based participants described modifying how, where, and with whom
they injected drugs in response; and experienced feelings of stress,
anxiety, and powerlessness. This was less common among San Diego-based
participants, who mostly attempted to avoid contact with LEOs in Mexico
while engaging in risky injection behavior.
Conclusion
Experiences of discrimination and stigma were reported by a larger
proportion of PWIDs living in Mexico, suggesting that they may be subject to
greater health harms related to policing practices compared with those
residing in the USA. Our findings reinforce the importance of efforts to
curb abuse and align policing practices with public health goals in both the
US and Mexico.
Purpose
The number of immigrants in the USA has increased steadily in recent decades. Two studies investigated individual differences that relate to attitudes toward immigrants in student and community samples. The paper aims to discuss this issue.
Design/methodology/approach
US university students and a community sampler were surveyed.
Findings
In both samples, higher scores on attributional complexity were associated with more positive attitudes toward immigrants and individuals who make dispositional attributions for the causes of crime and/or who are higher in faith in intuition tended to have more negative attitudes. Political orientation was a significant predictor in both samples; being more liberal and identifying as a Democrat compared to a Republican was related to more positive attitudes. Higher need for cognition scores were associated with more positive attitudes and higher legal authoritarianism scores were associated with more negative attitudes; however these were only significant predictors in the community sample.
Originality/value
Prejudicial attitudes toward immigrants can have adverse effects on immigrants in the realms of the legal system, workplace, healthcare, and education.
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