Spatializing stigma-power: Mental health impacts of spatial stigma in a legally-excluded settlement in Mumbai, India

PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023 Jul 20;3(7):e0001026. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0001026. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

In disadvantaged neighborhoods such as informal settlements (or "slums" in the Indian context), infrastructural deficits and social conditions have been associated with residents' poor mental health. Within social determinants of health framework, spatial stigma, or negative portrayal and stereotyping of particular neighborhoods, has been identified as a contributor to health deficits, but remains under-examined in public health research and may adversely impact the mental health of slum residents through pathways including disinvestment in infrastructure, internalization, weakened community relations, and discrimination. Based on analyses of individual interviews (n = 40) and focus groups (n = 6) in Kaula Bandar (KB), an informal settlement in Mumbai with a previously described high rate of probable common mental disorders (CMD), this study investigates the association between spatial stigma and mental health. The findings suggest that KB's high rate of CMDs stems, in part, from residents' internalization of spatial stigma, which negatively impacts their self-perceptions and community relations. Employing the concept of stigma-power, this study also reveals that spatial stigma in KB is produced through willful government neglect and disinvestment, including the denial of basic services (e.g., water and sanitation infrastructure, solid waste removal). These findings expand the scope of stigma-power from an individual-level to a community-level process by revealing its enactment through the actions (and inactions) of bureaucratic agencies. This study provides empirical evidence for the mental health impacts of spatial stigma and contributes to understanding a key symbolic pathway by which living in a disadvantaged neighborhood may adversely affect health.

Grants and funding

The study conceptualization, study design, hiring of the study team, data collection, and data transcription and translation were supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health Fogarty International Center (R24 TW007988; awarded to RS as a fellowship, including salary support for RS). The Rockefeller Foundation provided additional support awarded to PUKAR, with APD as one of the principal investigators. This grant included salary support for APD, TS, KS, SS, and RS. Data analysis and interpretation were partly supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (#1918175 (awarded to RS, including salary support for RS and AG) and #1918128 (awarded to LW, including salary support for SD and JD). The funders had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.