“…11 Cities are important geographic contexts to study in relation to hardships and HIV risk since the US HIV epidemic is concentrated in urban areas, and cities are sites where many economic, legal, and social policies are implemented and enforced and local health inequities produced. 12,13 Geographic context is also not limited to physical location but incorporates perspectives on the ways in which structural level inequities, within those geographic contexts, contribute to the production of HIV risk. 14,15 The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that economic, legal, and social hardships were associated with increased odds of HIV risks in a non-probability sample of Black MSM.…”