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Journal Article

Citation

Garcia A. Med. Anthropol. Q. 2015; 29(4): 455-472.

Affiliation

Department of Anthropology, Stanford University. garcia2@stanford.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, American Anthropological Association, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/maq.12208

PMID

25808246

Abstract

Over the last decade, there has been a sharp increase in drug addiction in Mexico, especially among the urban poor. During the same period, unregulated residential treatment centers for addiction, known as anexos, have proliferated throughout the country. These centers are utilized and run by marginalized populations and are widely known to engage in physical violence. Based on long-term ethnographic research in Mexico City, this article describes why anexos emerged, how they work, and what their prevalence and practices reveal about the nature of recovery in a context where poverty, drugs, and violence are existential realities. Drawing attention to the dynamic relationship between violence and recovery, pain, and healing, it complicates categories of violence and care that are presumed to have exclusive meaning, illuminating the divergent meanings of, and opportunities for, recovery, and how these are socially configured and sustained. [addiction, violence, Mexico, drug war, informality] This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

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