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1.0 Introduction 1.0 Introduction
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2.0 Citizenship and Solidarity 2.0 Citizenship and Solidarity
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2.1 Should Citizenship Matter for Health? 2.1 Should Citizenship Matter for Health?
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2.2 Health Owed 2.2 Health Owed
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2.3 The Public Nature of Health 2.3 The Public Nature of Health
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3.0 The Nondiscrimination Principle 3.0 The Nondiscrimination Principle
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4.0 Closing Borders 4.0 Closing Borders
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Twenty-One The Ethics and Justice of Recognizing Migrants’ Right to Health
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Published:November 2022
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Abstract
This chapter looks back at the decision to shutter borders to non-nationals during the Covid-19 pandemic, which reflects the common perception that national health policies should privilege citizens over others. It challenges the ethics and justice of the assumption that nations should favor their own when it comes to health. It also focuses on the ethics and justice of the common practice of favoring citizens over noncitizen immigrants with respect to health. The chapter looks at the nationalism view that aligns with the positivist claim that rights are simply entitlements that come from states. It reviews arguments for preferencing citizens that rely on the claim that the conferral of positive, social welfare rights requires a closed community with whom individuals share a sense of solidarity.
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