Brinkley-Rubinstein Lauren
Department of Human & Organizational Development, Peabody College, Vanderbilt University.
AIDS Educ Prev. 2015 Apr;27(2):167-79. doi: 10.1521/aeap.2015.27.2.167.
Race, HIV, and incarceration, as individual and intersecting markers of social identity, have associated stigma. While some research has indicated multiple burdens of stigma can be additive, there remains a lack of investigation relative to the effects of stigma among minorities who experience both HIV and incarceration. Therefore, the current study examines the impact of multiple forms of stigma via a series of ethnographic interviews (n = 46) conducted with 12 African American men over a one-year period. Results suggest that intersecting forms of stigma can have a severe impact on the general health, mental health, and the reintegration process of formerly incarcerated HIV-positive men. Additionally, participants often conceptualized all forms of stigma separately, which resulted in compounded burden of navigation. The experience of multiple forms of stigma was also often internalized as self-stigma whereby HIV-positive individuals with a history of incarceration assumed dominant norms related to both HIV and incarceration.
种族、艾滋病毒和监禁作为社会身份的个体及交叉标志,都带有相关污名。虽然一些研究表明多重污名负担可能具有累加性,但对于同时经历艾滋病毒感染和监禁的少数群体中污名的影响,仍缺乏调查。因此,本研究通过在一年时间内对12名非裔美国男性进行的一系列人种志访谈(n = 46),考察了多种形式污名的影响。结果表明,交叉形式的污名会对曾被监禁的艾滋病毒阳性男性的总体健康、心理健康及重新融入过程产生严重影响。此外,参与者常常将所有形式的污名分别看待,这导致了应对负担的加重。多种形式污名的经历也常常被内化为自我污名,即有监禁史的艾滋病毒阳性个体认同了与艾滋病毒和监禁相关的主导规范。