01392nas a2200121 4500000000100000008004100001100001200042245007400054856008500128490001800213520102500231022001401256 2017 d1 aBurns N00aThe human right to health: exploring disability, migration and health uhttp://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/09687599.2017.1358604?needAccess=true0 v35122291911223 a

Across the globe, an estimated one billion people are on the move today, of whom 244 million are international migrants. Not only have global horizons expanded in the realm of work and study; global conflict and exploitation have resulted in forced migration. Migration is a political issue, which raises questions of identity, citizenship, diversity and integration and is utilised to play upon the fear of the stranger, the ‘Other’ and difference in contemporary society. Disabled migrants are a hidden population whose experiences are often overlooked or subsumed within wider debates around disability and ethnicity. This article considers the intersection of disability and migration in contemporary society through the lens of healthcare access. Reflecting on the impact of citizenship rights on the realisation of human rights in the context of contemporary migration, using health as an example, the article considers the implications for disabled migrants, focusing primarily on the European Union.

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