Highlights
We present results from an ethnographic study on Venezuelan migrants’ access to healthcare in seven Latin American cities.
COVID-19 has worsened conditions of informality and health inequities for Venezuelan migrants.
The main obstacles to healthcare access are legal, financial, and relating to discrimination and information asymmetry.
Migrants rely on alternative care, such as telemedicine, extralegal doctors, and pharmacies.
In this theoretically ambitious article, Andrés
Guerrero aims to rethink the North’s Master
Narrative of liberal citizenship, comparing the
administration of Indians in past Ecuador with
the administration of illegal immigrants in
Spain today “as a sort of distorted reflection.”
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