Refugees and migrant access to health in transit countries: politics of adaptability, enactment of slow death and inevitability of pain: an ethnography of poor urban neighborhood in Rabat (Morocco)
Refugees and migrant access to health in transit countries: politics of adaptability, enactment of slow death and inevitability of pain: an ethnography of poor urban neighborhood in Rabat (Morocco)
Date
2019
Authors
El-Hawary, Nouran
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
This thesis project builds on three months of ethnographic and interview
research undertaken between February-May 2019 to explore refugee and
migrant access to health in one of Rabat’s poor neighbourhoods, Youssoufia,
which has a high concentration of sub-Saharan African migrants. Morocco’s
new National Immigration and Asylum Strategy (2014) officially grants
them the right to access primary health care (PHC) on an equal basis with
Moroccans. This strategy goes hand-in-hand with the Moroccan government’s
national attempt to extend universal health coverage (UHC) for the poor
and less-advantaged classes in order to achieve social equality and health
equity through the proliferation of PHC facilities. Focusing on Youssoufia,
the field findings suggest that despite the government’s numerous reforms,
proper implementation of the strategy was hindered by the poor governance
and accountability of the health sector, on one hand, and inadequate multistakeholders
migration management on the other hand. All that combined
with poor social determinants of health among refugees and migrants made
them depend on medical alternatives presented in self-medication and popular
healing practices. This research challenges the predominant proposition
assuming migrants and refugees burden national health resources. Rather, it
highlights the fact that promoting refugee and migrant access to PHC has been
negatively impacted by the dysfunctional national health systems of transit
countries in North Africa that have been subject to a massive disadvantage
behind the neo-liberal policies imposed by the Structural Adjustments
Programmes (SAPs) of the World Bank that have market-based approaches
to health care and the social determinants of health.
Description
ARMA - Arab Master’s Programme in Democracy and Human Rights, Saint Joseph University (Lebanon)
Second semester University: International University of Rabat (UIR)
Global Campus - Arab World
Second semester University: International University of Rabat (UIR)
Global Campus - Arab World
Keywords
migrations,
migrants,
refugees,
asylum,
Morocco,
right to health,
health services