Abstract
Introduction While ‘rights-talk’ is an important emancipatory discourse of our time, it is a form of discourse that is easier to conceptualize than institutionalize. In the language of rights, fundamental interests in food, shelter, education or housing, whose fulfilment is doubtless central to an emancipated life, become notoriously difficult to secure in appropriately institutional terms. These difficulties are perhaps nowhere more evident than with respect to the right to health. As a material interest so heavily influenced by economic and social determinants, by the availability and constraints of scientific and cultural knowledge, and by background protections of property and contract rights, the right to health presents momentous legal challenges. Its claims raise seemingly endless chains of causation and duties (and obfuscations from the role of genetics and luck) that defy our legal–institutional, as well as moral, categories. Yet despite all this, the right to health remains a popular discursive strategy for social movements advocating for medicines, healthcare or public health protections. More than just a galvanizer, the right to health may in fact prefigure and produce actual legal–institutional outcomes. Indeed, if we investigate political strategies around the right to health and the use by health rights movements of litigation, legislation and constitutional rights, we may observe a less fixed and certain, but possibly far-reaching, way in which health is secured through rights. This chapter examines two such cases, involving access to affordable medicines in South Africa and access to healthcare in Ghana.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Incentives for Global Public Health |
Subtitle of host publication | Patent Law and Access to Essential Medicines |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 357-380 |
Number of pages | 24 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9780511750786 |
ISBN (Print) | 9780521116565 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2010 |