2023
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-023-16538-2
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“When you leave your country, this is what you’re in for”: experiences of structural, legal, and gender-based violence among asylum-seeking women at the Mexico-U.S. border

Kaylee Ramage,
Emma Stirling-Cameron,
Nicole Elizabeth Ramos
et al.

Abstract: Background Recent U.S. immigration policy has increasingly focused on asylum deterrence and has been used extensively to rapidly deport and deter asylum-seekers, leaving thousands of would-be asylum-seekers waiting indefinitely in Mexican border cities, a large and growing proportion of whom are pregnant and parenting women. In the border city of Tijuana, Mexico, these women are spending unprecedented durations waiting under unsafe humanitarian conditions to seek safety in the U.S, with rising … Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…While waiting to enter the United States, asylum seekers in Mexico have been subjected to violence, extortion, kidnappings, and sexual assault. 5 , 6 They have minimal access to health care because of administrative barriers and lack the ability to pay for care. Subsequently, most care is provided pro bono by nongovernmental organizations and volunteers.…”
Section: Us–mexico Bordermentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…While waiting to enter the United States, asylum seekers in Mexico have been subjected to violence, extortion, kidnappings, and sexual assault. 5 , 6 They have minimal access to health care because of administrative barriers and lack the ability to pay for care. Subsequently, most care is provided pro bono by nongovernmental organizations and volunteers.…”
Section: Us–mexico Bordermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the US–Mexico border, asylum seekers face resistance from the US government and growing anti‐immigration sentiments. While waiting to enter the United States, asylum seekers in Mexico have been subjected to violence, extortion, kidnappings, and sexual assault 5,6 . They have minimal access to health care because of administrative barriers and lack the ability to pay for care.…”
Section: Us–mexico Bordermentioning
confidence: 99%