Williams Charmaine C, Gibson Margaret F, Mooney Emily, Forbes Joellean R, Curling Deone, Green Datejie Cheko, Ross Lori E
Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
School of Social Work, Renison University College, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Affilia. 2023 Aug;38(3):350-366. doi: 10.1177/08861099231155887. Epub 2023 Feb 28.
This article explores structural mechanisms that are the context for violence and depression in the lives of sexual minority women and trans people in Ontario, Canada. The article draws on interviews with 14 people who reported experiences of depression in the previous year, foregrounding three representative narratives. Narrative and case study analysis reveal that violence is a repeated and cumulative experience over lifetimes, occurring across different interpersonal contexts and institutional encounters. A common theme across the narratives is that experiences of violence are connected to a broader context in which structural arrangements, cultural norms, and institutional processes create conditions where marginalized people are put in harm's way, perpetrators are empowered, and justice and access to help are elusive. As the violence experienced by these sexual minority women and trans people is rooted in structural and cultural oppression represented in poverty, racism, misogyny, homophobia, and transphobia, the prevention of violence and its consequences for these and other marginalized populations requires systemic transformation of the structures and systems that currently allow and perpetuate harm.
本文探讨了加拿大安大略省性少数女性和跨性别者生活中暴力和抑郁背景下的结构机制。本文借鉴了对14名在过去一年中有抑郁经历者的访谈,突出了三个具有代表性的叙述。叙述和案例研究分析表明,暴力是一生反复且累积的经历,发生在不同的人际环境和机构遭遇中。这些叙述的一个共同主题是,暴力经历与更广泛的背景相关,在这个背景下,结构安排、文化规范和机构程序创造了使边缘化人群处于危险之中、施暴者被赋予权力、正义和获得帮助难以实现的条件。由于这些性少数女性和跨性别者所经历的暴力源于贫困、种族主义、厌女症、恐同症和恐跨症所代表的结构和文化压迫,预防暴力及其对这些和其他边缘化人群的影响需要对当前允许并使伤害持续存在的结构和系统进行系统性变革。