Health Justice for Immigrants, Revisited
This blog post applies the health justice lens to inequities in immigrant health and access to health care.

This blog post applies the health justice lens to inequities in immigrant health and access to health care.
Both vulnerability theory and health justice conceive of the relationship between law and behavior as holistic and constructive.
Addressing health injustice requires situating it within such a network of interacting forces, not treating it as a discrete problem.
Reproductive health, rights, and justice have been the proverbial canaries in the coal mine when considering the loss of bodily autonomy and human rights.
What if squad cars and SWAT teams were the last line of response to social dysfunction, rather than the first?
Every person should be treated as someone who is deeply loved, whose life is valued, and whose maximally healthy presence in the world is invaluable.
How might health justice engage health as a community good, and how might communities participate in creating the meanings of health justice?
This symposium explores how scholars, activists, communities, and health officials can use health justice frameworks to achieve health equity.
COVID Long Haulers and patient advocates for the chronically ill are forcing an unprecedented recognition for these chronic complex diseases.
Health care institutions have a responsibility to move from performative to intentional commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion.