ABSTRACT

What do we mean when we talk about rights in relation to health? Where does the language of health rights come from, and what are the implications of using such a discourse?

During the last 20 years there have been an increasing number of initiatives and efforts – for instance in relation to HIV/AIDS – which draw on the language, institutions and procedures of human rights in the field of global health. This book explores the historical, cultural and social context of public health activists’ increasing use of rights discourse and examines the problems it can entail in practice.

Structured around three interlinked themes, this book begins by looking at what health as a right means for our understandings of citizenship and political subjectivities. It then goes on to look at how and why some health problems came to be framed as human rights issues. The final part of the book investigates what happens when health rights are put into practice – how these are implemented, realised, cited, ignored and resisted.

Assembling Health Rights in Global Context provides an in-depth discussion of the historical, anthropological, social and political context of rights in health and develops much needed critical perspectives on the human rights approach to global health. It will be of interest to scholars of public health and human rights within health care as well as sociology and anthropology.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Global assemblages of virtue and vitality: genealogies and anthropologies of rights and health

part |50 pages

Rights, citizenships and subjectivities

chapter |19 pages

Not rights but reciprocal responsibility

The rhetoric of state health provision in early twentieth-century Britain

chapter |16 pages

Rights, responsibility and health services

Human rights as an idiomatic language of power

part |56 pages

Making health rights

chapter |21 pages

The political evolution of health as a human right

Conceptualizing public health under international law, 1940s–1990s

chapter |15 pages

Health right or human right?

Changing tides in the international discussion of female genital mutilation, 1970–2010 1

chapter |18 pages

Constructing tobacco control as a human rights issue

Smoking, lawyers and the judicialization of the right to health

part |59 pages

Resistance, contestation and translation

chapter |20 pages

From isolation to ‘living together'

Human rights in Japanese HIV/AIDS discourse

chapter |17 pages

State of exception, culture of medical police 1

SARS and the law of no rights in the People's Republic of China