Public charge, legal estrangement, and renegotiating situational trust in the US healthcare safety net

IF 2.3 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Meredith Van Natta
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

US immigration law increasingly excludes many immigrants materially and symbolically from vital safety-net resources. Existing scholarship has emphasized the public charge rule as a key mechanism for enacting these exclusionary trends, but less is known about how recent public charge uncertainty has shaped how noncitizens and healthcare workers negotiate safety-net resources. Drawing on ethnographic observations and interviews with 80 safety-net workers and patients in three US states from 2015 to 2020, I argue that intensifying anti-immigrant rhetoric surrounding public charge has extended a sense of surveillance into clinical spaces in previously unexamined ways. Drawing on theories of medical legal violence, system avoidance, and legal estrangement, I demonstrate how these dynamics undermined immigrants' health chances and compromised clinic workers' efforts to facilitate care. I also reveal how participants responded to this insinuation of legal violence in healthcare spaces by promoting situational trust in specific procedures and institutions.

公共负担,法律隔阂,以及重新谈判美国医疗安全网的情境信任
美国移民法越来越多地从物质上和象征上将许多移民排除在至关重要的安全网资源之外。现有的学术研究强调公共负担规则是制定这些排斥性趋势的关键机制,但对最近公共负担的不确定性如何影响非公民和医疗工作者如何谈判安全网资源的了解较少。从2015年到2020年,我对美国三个州的80名安全网工作人员和患者进行了人种学观察和采访,我认为围绕公共负担的反移民言论日益激烈,已经以以前未经研究的方式将一种监视感扩展到临床空间。借鉴医疗法律暴力、系统回避和法律隔阂的理论,我展示了这些动态如何破坏移民的健康机会,并损害了诊所工作人员促进护理的努力。我还揭示了参与者如何通过促进特定程序和机构的情境信任来应对医疗保健空间中法律暴力的暗示。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
3.40%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: Founded in 1966, Law & Society Review (LSR) is regarded by sociolegal scholars worldwide as a leading journal in the field. LSR is a peer-reviewed publication for work bearing on the relationship between society and the legal process, including: - articles or notes of interest to the research community in general - new theoretical developments - results of empirical studies - and reviews and comments on the field or its methods of inquiry Broadly interdisciplinary, Law & Society Review welcomes work from any tradition of scholarship concerned with the cultural, economic, political, psychological, or social aspects of law and legal systems.
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