Windsor Liliane Cambraia, Dunlap Eloise
Rutgers: The State University of New Jersey, School of Social Work, 536 George Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA.
J Ethn Subst Abuse. 2010;9(1):67-87. doi: 10.1080/15332640903539260.
The current article uses intersectionality and standpoint theories to examine the social impact of solely relying on Eurocentric worldviews when developing drug policies that affect low-income African American communities. It is argued that low-income African Americans share a unique cultural and historical background that must be taken into account in the development and implementation of policies and interventions that effect this population. Analysis of longitudinal qualitative data will compare the assumptions informing New York's Rockefeller Drug Laws with the worldviews of drug using and low-income African Americans in New York City, New York, while examining the impact of these policies in participants' lived experiences.
本文运用交叉性理论和立场理论,审视在制定影响低收入非裔美国人群体的毒品政策时,单纯依赖以欧洲为中心的世界观所产生的社会影响。文章认为,低收入非裔美国人拥有独特的文化和历史背景,在制定和实施针对这一群体的政策及干预措施时必须予以考虑。对纵向定性数据的分析将把影响纽约洛克菲勒毒品法的假设与纽约市使用毒品的低收入非裔美国人的世界观进行比较,同时考察这些政策对参与者生活经历的影响。