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For a Right to Health Beyond Biopolitics: The Politics of Pandemic and the ‘Politics of Life’

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-03-05, 10:34 authored by A Pele, S Riley
We argue, drawing on the work of Didier Fassin, that the right to health can be understood as an essential part of a radical politics of life. Since the right to health implies fostering the well-being of individuals in a way that is structural, progressive and non-discriminatory, the right not only problematises the ‘governmentality’ approach to power but allows push-back against statist and market discourses through a specific phenomenology of right. The discourse of rights – like the pandemic itself – oscillates between general and particular in a way that makes normative responses unstable. Nonetheless it is this dialectic that is characteristic of human rights discourse and allows a right to health to be the proper response to pandemic without it being subsumed within neoliberal logic. A politics of life is a multi-focussed analysis of life, health and society potentially resisting the appropriation of biological life by neoliberalism.

History

Author affiliation

School of Law

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Law, Culture and the Humanities

Pagination

174387212097820

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

1743-8721

eissn

1743-9752

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2021-02-20

Language

en

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