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Journal Article

Citation

Syvertsen JL, Bazzi AR, Rolon ML. Med. Anthropol. 2017; 36(6): 566-583.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/01459740.2017.1317770

PMID

28414530

Abstract

Sensationalistic media coverage has fueled stereotypes of the Mexican border city of Tijuana as a violent battleground of the global drug war. While the drug war shapes health and social harms in profoundly public ways, less visible are the experiences and practices of hope that forge communities of care and represent more private responses to this crisis. In this article, we draw on ethnographic fieldwork and photo elicitation with female sex workers who inject drugs and their intimate, non-commercial partners in Tijuana to examine the personal effects of the drug war. Drawing on a critical phenomenology framework, which links political economy with phenomenological concern for subjective experience, we explore the ways in which couples try to find hope amidst the horrors of the drug war. Critical visual scholarship may provide a powerful alternative to dominant media depictions of violence, and ultimately clarify why this drug war must end.


Language: en

Keywords

Mexico; critical phenomenology; drug war; hope; injection drug use; photo elicitation

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