Access to universal health care in Canada has become a symbol of
national identity and, as such, has also become a highly
contentious and politically charged question in the field of public
policy. The extent of the passion and disagreement that health care
issues provoke is evident in the simple fact that although Canada
has undergone dramatic changes in citizenship development since the
early 1980s, the health care system has changed very little.
Candace Johnson Redden examines the theoretical dimensions of
citizenship and rights in Canada as they intersect with health care
politics, and offers possible answers to questions concerning the
philosophical and political meanings of the right to health care in
advanced industrial societies, the equitable distribution of health
care resources in those societies, and the effects of globalization
and fractured patterns of citizenship on discussions of
entitlement, universal human rights, and bioethics.
Redden asserts that this new change in citizenship development
will require a health care system that is capable of recognizing
the different citizenships across Canada, flexible enough to
accommodate many different citizenship claims, and consequently
able to facilitate interaction between communities and governments.
This interdisciplinary study examines epidemiological,
technological, and political patterns, and will appeal to anyone
interested in Canadian politics, policy, citizenship and health
care.
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