Literature DB >> 34010780

Beyond border health: Infrastructural violence and the health of border abolition.

Sam B Dubal1, Shamsher S Samra2, Hannah H Janeway3.   

Abstract

Most existing approaches to border health focus on identifying the social determinants that produce ill health and health disparities among migrants, including language barriers, documentation status, and trauma associated with migration. Attention to these kinds of problems can lead to policy and clinical changes that indeed help improve quantitatively measurable outcomes for patients. However, these approaches usually ignore the larger historical and political framework that determines the determinants - the underlying infrastructure of ill health, or what we term the infrastructural determinants of health. In this paper, we outline specific infrastructures involving race, political economy, history, and most importantly, borders themselves, that lay the foundations for border illness. We examine the plans, histories, policies, and peoples involved in building the conditions for migration, particularly out of the Northern Triangle, including forces of colonialism, US imperialism, neoliberalism, and border militarization. In place of a tacit acceptance of the modern system of borders, we argue for border abolition as a vital but underused treatment in the repertoire of medical intervention. Outlining the rights of people to stay and to move, and drawing on lessons from the prison abolition movement, we offer policies and practices towards a 'no borders' system that privileges liberatory solidarity with migrants by explicitly challenging global infrastructures that drive displacement. In doing so, we offer an emergent framework for a medical border abolition that treats both the causes and symptoms of a widespread global sickness.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Border abolition; Border health; Immigrant health; Migrant health; Violence

Year:  2021        PMID: 34010780     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113967

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  3 in total

1.  "Housing Is Health Care": Treating Homelessness in Safety-net Hospitals.

Authors:  Christoph Hanssmann; Janet K Shim; Irene H Yen; Mark D Fleming; Meredith Van Natta; Ariana Thompson-Lastad; Maryani Palupy Rasidjan; Nancy J Burke
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2021-11-11

2.  Deported, homeless, and into the canal: Environmental structural violence in the binational Tijuana River.

Authors:  Alhelí Calderón-Villarreal; Brendan Terry; Joseph Friedman; Sara Alejandra González-Olachea; Alfonso Chavez; Margarita Díaz López; Lilia Pacheco Bufanda; Carlos Martinez; Stephanie Elizabeth Medina Ponce; Rebeca Cázares-Adame; Paola Fernanda Rochin Bochm; Georgia Kayser; Steffanie A Strathdee; Gabriela Muñoz Meléndez; Seth M Holmes; Ietza Bojorquez; Marc Los Huertos; Philippe Bourgois
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2022-05-18       Impact factor: 5.379

Review 3.  Migration-related trauma and mental health among migrant children emigrating from Mexico and Central America to the United States: Effects on developmental neurobiology and implications for policy.

Authors:  Emily M Cohodes; Sahana Kribakaran; Paola Odriozola; Sarah Bakirci; Sarah McCauley; H R Hodges; Lucinda M Sisk; Sadie J Zacharek; Dylan G Gee
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2021-07-22       Impact factor: 2.531

  3 in total

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