Temporalities of emergency: Migrant pregnancy and healthcare networks in Southern European borderlands
Abstract
In Greece, Italy, and Spain, austerity policies combined with the structural density of migration flows have had concrete social and material manifestations in the delivery of public health care. Through our ethnographic case studies in Lampedusa and southeastern Sicily, Melilla, and Athens, we examine the maternity care offered to migrant patients in the midst and the aftermath of the so-called "migration crisis" in state and non-state structures.
Origin | Files produced by the author(s) |
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