Literature DB >> 20927201

Labor Migration, Drug Trafficking Organizations, and Drug Use: Major Challenges for Transnational Communities in Mexico.

Víctor García1, Laura González.   

Abstract

In our article, we present the recent findings of our ethnographic field study on drug use and the emergence of a drug use culture in transnational communities in Mexico. Transnational communities are part of a larger migratory labor circuit that transcends political borders and are not restricted to a single locality. Transnational migrants and returning immigrants link the multiple localities through their social networks. In southern Guanajuato, Mexico, using a transnational migration paradigm, we examined the manner in which transnational migration and drug trafficking organizations are contributing to a growing drug problem in these communities. We found that transnational migrants and returning immigrants, including deported workers, introduce drugs and drug use practices, and contribute to the creation of a drug use culture within the communities. The social conditions in the community that foster and proliferate drug use are many: the erosion of the traditional family, truncated kinship bases, and new social formations. These conditions are all consequences of migration and emigration. Recent drug cartel activities are also contributing to this growing drug problem. The cartels have aggressively targeted these communities because of availability of money, existing drug use, a drug use culture, and the breakdown of traditional deterrents to substance abuse. Although a number of communities in three municipalities were part of our study, we focus on two: Lindavista, a rancho, Progreso, a municipal seat. Our field study in Mexico, one of four sequential ethnographic field studies conducted in Guanajuato and Pennsylvania, was completed over a six month period, from September, 2008, through February, 2009, using traditional ethnography. The four field studies are part of a larger, ongoing, three-year bi-national study on drug use among transnational migrants working in southeastern Pennsylvania. This larger study, near its third and final year, is funded by the National Institute of Drug Abuse.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 20927201      PMCID: PMC2949286     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Urban Anthropol Stud Cult Syst World Econ Dev        ISSN: 0894-6019


  3 in total

1.  Gender, class, and migration in the Dominican Republic: women's experiences in a transnational community.

Authors:  E Georges
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  1992-07-06       Impact factor: 5.691

2.  Narcotrafficking, migration, and modernity in rural Mexico.

Authors:  V Malkin
Journal:  Lat Am Perspect       Date:  2001

3.  Meeting a binational research challenge: substance abuse among transnational Mexican farmworkers in the United States.

Authors:  Victor Garcia
Journal:  J Rural Health       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 4.333

  3 in total
  6 in total

1.  Time Since Migration and HIV Risk Behaviors Among Puerto Ricans Who Inject Drugs in New York City.

Authors:  Camila Gelpí-Acosta; Enrique R Pouget; Kathleen H Reilly; Holly Hagan; Alan Neaigus; Travis Wendel; David M Marshall
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2016-04-21       Impact factor: 2.164

2.  Sociopolitical contexts for addiction recovery: Anexos in U.S. Latino communities.

Authors:  Anna Pagano; Victor García; Carlos Recarte; Juliet P Lee
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2016-09-03

3.  Relationships Between Integration and Drug Use Among Deported Migrants in Tijuana, Mexico.

Authors:  Danielle Horyniak; Miguel Pinedo; Jose Luis Burgos; Victoria D Ojeda
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2017-10

Review 4.  A critical review of social and structural conditions that influence HIV risk among Mexican deportees.

Authors:  Miguel Pinedo; José Luis Burgos; Victoria D Ojeda
Journal:  Microbes Infect       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 2.700

Review 5.  A transnational approach to understanding indicators of mental health, alcohol use and reproductive health among indigenous mexican migrants.

Authors:  María Luisa Zúñiga; Pedro Lewin Fischer; Debra Cornelius; Wayne Cornelius; Shira Goldenberg; David Keyes
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2014-06

6.  Syndemics in Symbiotic Cities: Pathogenic Policy and the Production of Health Inequity across Borders.

Authors:  Carina Heckert
Journal:  J Borderl Stud       Date:  2019-12-09
  6 in total

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