AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines the relationship between drug use and violence in urban settings, particularly focusing on how students might use violence to refuse drug offers.
  • Researchers gathered data from surveys and focus groups involving lower secondary students in three Mexican metropolitan areas.
  • Findings suggest that students who resort to violence to reject drug offers have a more troubled psychosocial background, with exposure to neighborhood violence being a key factor.

Article Abstract

Drug use and violence are two interconnected problems in violent urban contexts, leading to coercive drug offers. In this study, relationships between drug use, use of violence as a strategy for rejecting drug offers, and exposure to neighborhood violence were analyzed in Mexican students. Data were obtained through a self-report survey and focus groups with lower secondary students in three Mexican metropolitan areas. Both quantitative and qualitative results indicated that students who had used or would use violence as a strategy for rejecting drug offers presented a more problematic psychosocial profile, with exposure to neighborhood violence as the main predictor. These results suggest that Mexican students in violent cities may resort to violence as a strategy for rejecting drug offers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9450683PMC

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