The making of human rights polities: contentious governance and the uneven implementation of human rights. The case of irregular migrants’ unequal access to healthcare in Spain after Royal Decree Law 16/2012
The making of human rights polities: contentious governance and the uneven implementation of human rights. The case of irregular migrants’ unequal access to healthcare in Spain after Royal Decree Law 16/2012
Date
2018
Authors
Venner, Kayin
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
The emergence of ‘new nationalism’ undermines the principle of
universality and threatens the realisation of human rights of irregular migrants.
Within this context, and that of an economic crisis, Royal Decree-Law (RDL)
16/2012 encroached upon irregular migrants’ right to health in Spain. Despite
its enactment at national level, several autonomous communities refused to
implement the law, among other things in the name of the (human) right to
health. The latter depicts the emergence of ‘human rights polities’; political
entities at local, regional or supranational levels, less subject to new nationalism,
that develop policies in contestation to existing hierarchies to uphold human
rights. This process constitutes a process of contentious governance, which
can be analysed through the concepts of political opportunity structures, the
formation of collective actors and contentious performances. In the context
of RDL 16/2012, autonomous communities within Spain have contributed to
pressure from the bottom-up to implement human rights standards at regional
and national level. Among other things, the gap in the implementation of RDL
16/2012 can be attributed to a divergence in competencies, political colour
and interests between the national state and the autonomous communities, as
well as diverse political opportunity structures and fragmented social pressure.
The more inclusive nature of regional governments, I argue, is an argument in
favour of the ‘democratisation of human rights instruments’, especially given
the recent upsurge of new nationalism.
Description
Second semester University: University of Deusto, Bilbao.
Keywords
human rights,
governance,
irregular migrations,
Spain,
right to health,
nationalism,
national state,
local government,
central-local government relations