Global Acceleration and Dispossesion: Regression in the Right to Life and Public Health during Ecuador’s Neoliberal Decades

 

Authors
Breilh Paz y Miño, Jaime Eduardo; Tillería Muñoz, Ylonka
Format
Book
Status
publishedVersion
Description

The present essay’s central argument or hypothesis is, consequently, that the mechanisms accelerating a wealth concentrating and exclusionary economy centred on the benefit and overprotection of big business—with a corresponding plundering of resources that are vital for life—generated forms of loss and regression in the right to healthcare and the dismantling of institutional protections. These are all expressed in indicators from 1990-2005, which point not only to the deterioration of healthcare programs and services but also to the undermining of the general conditions of life (social reproduction) and, in contrast to the reports and predictions of the era’s governments, a stagnation or deterioration in health indicators, especially for those most sensitive to the crisis. The present study’s argument is linked together across distinct chapters. First, we undertake the necessary clarification of the categories central to the understanding of a complex issue; clarifying the concept of health itself and its determinants, emphasizing the necessity of taking on an integral understanding as a fundamental prerequisite to unravelling what documents and reports from this era either leave unsaid or distort. Based on that analysis, we will explain the harmful effects of global economic acceleration, the monopolization and pillaging of strategic healthcare goods; not only those which directly place obstacles on the access to health services, but also those like the destructuration of small economies, linked to the impoverishment and worsening of living modes. Thinking epidemiologically, we intend to show signs of the deterioration of broad collectivities’ ways of life as a result of the mechanisms of acceleration and pillage. We will then collect disparate evidence of the deterioration of human health and ecosystems to, finally, establish the most urgent conclusions about this unfortunate period of our social and medical history.

Publication Year
2008
Language
eng
Topic
SALUD PÚBLICA
SUMAK KAWSAY
CALIDAD DE LA VIDA
DERECHO A LA SALUD
DESIGUALDAD SOCIAL
GLOBALIZACIÓN ECONÓMICA
NEOLIBERALISMO
EPIDEMIOLOGÍA CRÍTICA
Repository
Repositorio Universidad Andina Simón Bolivar
Get full text
http://hdl.handle.net/10644/3285
Rights
openAccess
License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ec/