Human Organization
Volume 68, Issue 3, 2009, Pages 328-339
The effects of problem drinking and sexual risk among mexican migrant workers on their community of origin (Article)
Duke M.* ,
Gómez Carpinteiro F.
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a
Pacific Institute for Research, Evaluation's Prevention Research Center, Berkeley, CA, United States
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b
Faculty of the Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, México, United States
Abstract
Although the financial remittances sent by male Mexican migrant workers residing in the United States can result in higher standards of living for their families and home communities, out-migration may lead to increased migrant problem drinking and sexual risk behaviors, which may in turn impact these same communities of origin. Based on semi-structured interviewing (n=60) and participant observation in a migrant sending community in central Mexico and a receiving community in the Northeastern United States, this paper explores the effects of out-migration on HIV risk and problem drinking among United States-based migrants from a small agricultural community in the Mexican state of Puebla. We argue that problem drinking and risky sexual behaviors among these migrant workers have had significant consequences for their home community in terms of diminished remittances, the introduction of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, and loss of husbands or kinsmen to automobile accidents. Moreover, although rumor and gossip between the two communities serve as a form of social control, they may also contribute to increased problem drinking and sexual risk.
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-70549098243&doi=10.17730%2fhumo.68.3.673vg846646w1617&partnerID=40&md5=72fcab59c6de1f609e09688da70ca9c6
DOI: 10.17730/humo.68.3.673vg846646w1617
ISSN: 00187259
Cited by: 21
Original Language: English