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Human rights-based conceptions of deservingness: health and precarity

Sarah Marshall (Department of Sociology, York University, Toronto, Canada)

International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care

ISSN: 1747-9894

Article publication date: 15 September 2020

Issue publication date: 15 September 2020

176

Abstract

Purpose

Ideas of health-related deservingness in theory and practise have largely been attached to humanitarian notions of compassion and care for vulnerable persons, in contrast to rights-based approaches involving a moral-legal obligation to care based on universal citizenship principles. This paper aims to provide an alternative to these frames, seeking to explore ideas of a human rights-based deservingness framework to understand health care access and entitlement amongst precarious status persons in Canada.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing from theoretical conceptualizations of deservingness, this paper aims to bring deservingness frameworks into the language of human rights discourses as these ideas relate to inequalities based on noncitizenship.

Findings

Deservingness frameworks have been used in public discourses to both perpetuate and diminish health-related inequalities around access and entitlement. Although, movements based on human rights have the potential to be co-opted and used to re-frame precarious status migrants as “undeserving”, movements driven by frames of human rights-based deservingness can subvert these dominant, negative discourses.

Originality/value

To date, deservingness theory has primarily been used to speak to issues relating to deservingness to welfare services. In relation to deservingness and precarious status migrants, much of the literature focuses on humanitarian notions of the “deserving” migrant. Health-related deservingness based on human rights has been under-theorized in the literature and the authors can learn from activist movements, precarious status migrants and health care providers that have taken on this approach to mobilize for rights based on being “human”.

Keywords

Citation

Marshall, S. (2020), "Human rights-based conceptions of deservingness: health and precarity", International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care, Vol. 16 No. 3, pp. 279-292. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMHSC-07-2019-0071

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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