首页> 外文期刊>Journal of immigrant and minority health >'They Talk Like That, But We Keep Working': Sexual Harassment and Sexual Assault Experiences Among Mexican Indigenous Farmworker Women in Oregon
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'They Talk Like That, But We Keep Working': Sexual Harassment and Sexual Assault Experiences Among Mexican Indigenous Farmworker Women in Oregon

机译:“他们那样说话,但我们继续工作”:俄勒冈州墨西哥土著农民工中的性骚扰和性侵犯经历

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摘要

In order to examine the experiences of sexual harassment and sexual assault among indigenous and non-indigenous Mexican immigrant farmworkers in Oregon's Willamette Valley, a community-academic participatory research partnership initiated a study, which included focus groups, conducted and analyzed by skilled practitioners and researchers. The themes that emerged from the focus groups included direct and indirect effects of sexual harassment and sexual assault on women and risk factors associated with the farmworker workplace environment, and the increased vulnerability of non-Spanish-speaking indigenous women due to low social status, poverty, cultural and linguistic issues, and isolation. Recommendations for prevention and improved services for vulnerable women will be discussed as well as limitations and future research directions.
机译:为了研究俄勒冈州威拉米特山谷的墨西哥土著和非土著移民农民的性骚扰和性侵犯的经验,社区-学术参与研究合作伙伴发起了一项研究,其中包括焦点小组,由熟练的从业者和研究人员进行并分析。焦点小组提出的主题包括性骚扰和性侵犯对妇女的直接和间接影响以及与农民工工作环境有关的危险因素,以及由于社会地位低下,贫穷而使不讲西班牙语的土著妇女的脆弱性增加,文化和语言问题以及孤立性。将讨论为弱势妇女提供预防和改善服务的建议,以及局限性和未来的研究方向。

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