Department of Public Health, School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, University of California, Merced, Merced, CA, United States.
Department of Health, Society and Behavior, Program in Public Health, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2022 Sep 16;10:928435. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.928435. eCollection 2022.
As evidence of the negative health impact of immigration enforcement policy continues to mount, public health research has focused primarily on the psychosocial health mechanisms, such as fear and stress, by which immigration enforcement may harm health. We build on this research using structural vulnerability theory to investigate the structural processes by which enforcement policy may shape Latino immigrants' health. We conducted qualitative analysis of from a purposive sample of Latino immigrants (n=14) living in Southern California in 2015, a period of significant federal, state, and local enforcement policy change. are a narrative methodology used across the social sciences and humanities to center the voices of marginalized people. Through unstructured interviews, we sought to understand Latino immigrants' experiences with immigration enforcement and identify specific structural factors by which those experiences may influence health. Respondents' narratives revealed that singular enforcement experiences were not viewed as the sole manifestation of enforcement, but as part of a system of intersecting physical, legal, institutional, and economic exclusions which shaped the social and economic conditions that influence health. These exclusions reinforced respondents' marginalization, produced instability about the future, and generated a sense of individual responsibility and blame. We discuss how physical, legal, institutional, and economic processes may influence health and propose a framework to inform population health research on intersecting structural health mechanisms.
随着移民执法政策对健康产生负面影响的证据不断增加,公共卫生研究主要集中在移民执法可能损害健康的心理社会健康机制上,例如恐惧和压力。我们利用结构脆弱性理论来研究执法政策可能影响拉丁裔移民健康的结构过程,以此为基础进行研究。我们对 2015 年生活在南加州的 14 名拉丁裔移民进行了有针对性抽样的定性分析,这是联邦、州和地方执法政策发生重大变化的时期。 是一种在社会科学和人文学科中广泛使用的叙事方法,旨在将边缘化人群的声音置于中心位置。通过非结构化的 访谈,我们试图了解拉丁裔移民的移民执法经历,并确定这些经历可能影响健康的具体结构因素。受访者的叙述表明,单一的执法经历并不是执法的唯一表现形式,而是作为一个由物理、法律、制度和经济排斥相交织的系统的一部分,该系统塑造了影响健康的社会和经济条件。这些排斥加剧了受访者的边缘化,对未来产生了不稳定性,并产生了个人责任和指责的感觉。我们讨论了物理、法律、制度和经济过程如何影响健康,并提出了一个框架,为交叉结构健康机制的人口健康研究提供信息。