Department of Sociology, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada.
Can Rev Sociol. 2023 Nov;60(4):542-566. doi: 10.1111/cars.12457. Epub 2023 Sep 12.
Significant socio-economic, health, and mental health disparities due to highly entrenched and systemic anti-Black racism in Canadian institutions, policies, and practices are now well documented in research and policy reports. Yet, few in-depth studies have addressed the mental health impacts of anti-Black racism on Canadian populations. This article is rooted in a community-based, qualitative research project with young first and second-generation Black Caribbean-Canadian mothers and is informed by Black Feminist epistemologies and intersectional theories and methodologies. Our research demonstrates how participants' childhood experiences with xenophobic and racist immigration policies and educational, child welfare, and childcare systems caused their future mental health challenges as young Black mothers, and how these struggles were exacerbated by their encounters with the racist, ageist, xenophobic medical, social, and mental health services they had to access as young mothers. Based on these findings, we recommend enhancements to current social policies to minimize the differential mental health impacts on young Black Canadian mothers.
由于加拿大机构、政策和实践中根深蒂固的系统性反黑人种族主义,导致了严重的社会经济、健康和心理健康方面的差距,这在研究和政策报告中都有详细记录。然而,很少有深入的研究探讨反黑人种族主义对加拿大人口的心理健康影响。本文是基于一个以社区为基础的、针对年轻第一代和第二代加勒比黑人加拿大母亲的定性研究项目,其理论基础是黑人女权主义认识论和交叉理论和方法。我们的研究表明,参与者在童年时期经历的仇外和种族主义移民政策以及教育、儿童福利和儿童保育系统如何导致他们作为年轻黑人母亲未来面临心理健康挑战,以及当他们作为年轻母亲不得不接触到种族主义、年龄歧视、仇外的医疗、社会和心理健康服务时,这些斗争是如何加剧的。基于这些发现,我们建议对当前的社会政策进行改进,以最大限度地减少对年轻黑人加拿大母亲的不同心理健康影响。