An Unkind Cut: Circumcision, Death and the Impact of Irish Health Policy on Asylum Seekers
Data(s) |
01/07/2010
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Resumo |
Healthcare and the wider social determinants of health are the keystone of a number of complex progressive social justice issues that evoke complex emotions. As the demography of Ireland rapidly changes, the practices and expectations of some asylum seekers presents new opportunities for the providers of health service provision and reform. This paper looks at some of the emotions evoked in health care issues and draws on observations and interviews from empirical fieldwork carried out for the Health Research Board. The research was conducted both in the Adelaide and Meath Hospital, incorporating the National Children’s Hospital, Tallaght and in a number of refugee reception centres in Ireland. At one level honouring faith choices within a healthcare setting is a societal acknowledgement made to people at their most vulnerable, that the potent and cathartic transformative rituals they value are significant in mediating and managing their emotions - at another level, it is a practical and a symbolic communication of a statutory commitment to inter-culturalism and community cohesion.. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Direitos |
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess |
Fonte |
Radford , K 2010 , ' An Unkind Cut: Circumcision, Death and the Impact of Irish Health Policy on Asylum Seekers ' Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies , vol 36(6) , pp. 889-915 . |
Tipo |
article |