4.2 Article

Intersectional analysis of cannabis use, stigma and health among marginalized Nigerian women

期刊

SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS
卷 43, 期 3, 页码 660-677

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.13244

关键词

cannabis use; gender; health; intersectionality; Nigeria; stigma

资金

  1. Centre for Research and Information on Substance Abuse (CRISA)
  2. International Blue Cross (IBC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study explores how intersecting stigmas around social identity categories shape cannabis use and health harms for marginalized women. Women's initiation of cannabis use was influenced by social networks and sexual relationships.
Cannabis use by women has been under-researched, particularly use by marginalized women in developing societies. This article draws on qualitative research in Uyo, Nigeria, to explore how intersecting stigmas around social identity categories (e.g. gender, sex work) shapes cannabis use and contributes to health harms for marginalized women. Qualitative data were collected via in-depth interviews with street-involved female cannabis users, and transcribed, coded and analysed thematically. Initiation of cannabis use was influenced by social networks and sexual relationships. Heavy cannabis use enabled some women to perform alternative femininity thereby challenging the boundaries of appropriate gendered behaviour, while others were pressured by normative expectations to enact moderation according to traditional femininity. Recreational cannabis use overlapped with marginalized forms of use, including using heavily to cope with the mental health sequalae of gender-based discriminations and structural inequities. Cannabis use attracted heightened stigma, operating as part of intersecting stigmatizing identities that adversely impacted mental health and wellbeing. Cannabis stigma does not exist in isolation from other social identity categories that shape women's lives. There exists a need to combat stigma through interventions that seek to mediate changes in gender relations, improve living conditions and access to health-care services for marginalized women.

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