How is health-related “deservingness” reckoned? Perspectives from unauthorized im/migrants in Tel Aviv
Sarah S. Willen
Social Science & Medicine, 2012, vol. 74, issue 6, 812-821
Abstract:
Do unauthorized im/migrants have a right to health? Do they deserve health care, or health protection, or access to the social determinants of good health? Are they party to prevailing social contracts, or does their exclusion from mainstream systems of health promotion, prevention, and care “make sense”? Questions like these, which generate considerable attention in multiple spheres of scholarship, policy, and public debate, revolve around an issue that merits substantially greater consideration among social scientists of health: health-related “deservingness.” In addition to putting the issue of health-related deservingness squarely on the map as an object of analysis, this article further argues that we cannot focus solely on those with power, influence, and public voice. Rather, we also must investigate how deservingness is reckoned in relation to – and, furthermore, from the perspectives of – unauthorized im/migrants and members of other groups commonly constructed in public and policy discourse as undeserving. Additionally, we must consider the complicated relationship between universalizing juridical arguments about formal entitlement to health rights, on one hand, and situationally specific, vernacular moral arguments about deservingness, on the other.
Keywords: Israel; Unauthorized immigration; Im/migrant health; "Illegality"; Deservingness; Health care access; Idioms of social justice mobilization; Renegade moralities (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:socmed:v:74:y:2012:i:6:p:812-821
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DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.06.033
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