Abstract

 


 



The 'Other' Within: Health Care Reform, Class, and the Politics of Reproduction


Janet L. Dolgin


Hofstra University - School of Law

Katherine Rouse Dieterich


Hofstra University - Maurice A. Deane School of Law

February 16, 2012

Seattle University Law Review, Vol. 35, p. 377, 2012
Hofstra Univ. Legal Studies Research Paper No. 12-02

Abstract:     
The Article explores the nation’s resistance to developing a more equitable system of health care coverage. It does that through reference to the nation’s peculiar class system. Americans contend that anyone can avoid poverty through hard work and responsible choices. Yet, in fact, class mobility is the exception, not the rule. Americans are deeply anxious about safeguarding relative class status, but the signs through which they assess class are murky. In measuring their own socioeconomic status in relation to others, Americans consciously look to a wide set of elusive, shifting status symbols. Less consciously, though with equal, if not greater, intensity, they seek to assess each others’ class status through reference to signs of good health and ill health.

The Article examines the centrality of that process to the nation’s hesitancy about providing universal health care. Recent responses to the reproductive health needs of poor women are illustrative. The passage of the Act reshaped and reinforced a narrative about poor women and their reproductive lives. The Article examines that narrative in detail in connection with recent federal and state resistance to funding abortions and family planning services.

Within the politics surrounding health care reform, poor women with reproductive capacity have been marked as the “Other” within. In theory, they are beneficiaries of health care reform. In fact, deprived of the services they actually need, they are unlikely to flourish and are thus unlikely to become competitors on the nation’s socioeconomic ladder. The harm to them is clear. The harm to the nation is harder to discern but equally real. It includes less good health, larger social problems, and less contentment for everyone.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 50

Keywords: reproductive health, women's health, health care reform, socio-economic status

JEL Classification: I12, I18, I31, J70, J71, J78

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Date posted: February 18, 2012  

Suggested Citation

Dolgin, Janet L. and Dieterich, Katherine Rouse, The 'Other' Within: Health Care Reform, Class, and the Politics of Reproduction (February 16, 2012). Seattle University Law Review, Vol. 35, p. 377, 2012; Hofstra Univ. Legal Studies Research Paper No. 12-02. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2006554

Contact Information

Janet L. Dolgin (Contact Author)
Hofstra University - School of Law ( email )
121 Hofstra University
Hempstead, NY 11549
United States

Hofstra University Logo

Katherine Rouse Dieterich
Hofstra University - Maurice A. Deane School of Law ( email )
121 Hofstra University
Hempstead, NY 11549
United States
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