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| DOI | 10.1007/S11013-024-09858-4 | ||||
| Año | 2024 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
The arrival of Afro-descendant migrants, mainly from Haiti and the Dominican Republic, has led to the emergence of new discourses on migration, multiculturalism, and mental health in health services in Chile since 2010. In this article, I explore how mental health institutions, experts, and practitioners have taken a cultural turn in working with migrant communities in this new multicultural scenario. Based on a multisited ethnography conducted over 14 months in a neighbourhood of northern Santiago, I focus on the Migrant Program-a primary health care initiative implemented since 2013. I argue that health practitioners have tended to redefine cultural approaches in structural terms focusing mainly on class aspects such poverty, social stratification, and socioeconomic inequalities. I affirm that this structural-based approach finds its historical roots in a political and ideological context that provided the conditions for the development of community psychiatry experiences during the 1960s and 1970s, as well as in multicultural and gender policies promoted by the state since the 1990s. This case reveals how health institutions and practitioners have recently engaged in debates on migration and intersectionality from a structural approach in Chile.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Abarca-Brown, Gabriel | Hombre |
Univ Copenhagen - Dinamarca
Universidad Diego Portales - Chile Københavns Universitet - Dinamarca |
| Fuente |
|---|
| Danmarks Grundforskningsfond |
| Københavns Universitet |
| H2020 European Research Council |
| Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo |
| Agencia Nacional de Investigacin y Desarrollo |
| Center for Culture |
| ANID-BecasChile |
| Agradecimiento |
|---|
| No Statement Available |
| Open access funding provided by Copenhagen University. Funding was provided in different stages of this research by Agencia Nacional de Investigaci\u00F3n y Desarrollo (ANID-BecasChile), H2020 European Research Council (DECOLMAD Grant No. 851871), and the Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF171] through the Center for Culture and the Mind (CULTMIND) at the University of Copenhagen. |