2019
DOI: 10.1007/s11469-019-00162-6
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The Impact of Indigenous Identity and Treatment Seeking Intention on the Stigmatization of Substance Use

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…The results indicated that when the subject was described as Indigenous in the vignette, participants stigmatization increased (e.g., desire for more social distance, felt stronger negative emotions, and viewed the subject as less competent and predictable) than when described as Caucasian. (Winters & Harris, 2020). These results demonstrate that negative stereotypes around Indigenous individuals exist in Canadian society, especially for substance use, and may be influential for how jurors could perceive Indigenous eyewitnesses and defendants.…”
Section: Stereotypes Of Indigenous Canadiansmentioning
confidence: 75%
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“…The results indicated that when the subject was described as Indigenous in the vignette, participants stigmatization increased (e.g., desire for more social distance, felt stronger negative emotions, and viewed the subject as less competent and predictable) than when described as Caucasian. (Winters & Harris, 2020). These results demonstrate that negative stereotypes around Indigenous individuals exist in Canadian society, especially for substance use, and may be influential for how jurors could perceive Indigenous eyewitnesses and defendants.…”
Section: Stereotypes Of Indigenous Canadiansmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…It is evident that participants believed that Canadian society is plagued by stereotypes that categorize Indigenous Canadians as criminal, lazy, uneducated, alcoholics who depend on government aid (Haddock et al, 1994;Morrison et al, 2008). Additionally, Winters and Harris (2020) examined public stigma toward substance use disorder (SUD). Participants were randomly assigned to read one of four vignettes on an individual living with a SUD, where ethnicity (Caucasian vs. Indigenous) and treatment seeking intention (seeking vs. not seeking treatment) varied.…”
Section: Stereotypes Of Indigenous Canadiansmentioning
confidence: 99%