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Labor migration, externalities and ethics: Theorizing the meso-level determinants of HIV vulnerability

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  • Hirsch, Jennifer S.

Abstract

This paper discusses labor migration as an example of how focusing on the meso-level highlights the social processes through which structural factors produce HIV risk. Situating that argument in relation to existing work on economic organization and HIV risk as well as research on labor migration and HIV vulnerabilities, the paper demonstrates how analyzing the processes through which labor migration creates vulnerability can shift attention away from the proximate behavioral determinants of HIV risk and toward the community and policy levels. Further, it presents the concepts of externalities and the ethics of consumption, which underline how both producers and consumers benefit from low-waged migrant labor, and thus are responsible for the externalization of HIV risk characteristic of supply chains that rely on migrant labor. These concepts point to strategies through which researchers and advocates could press the public and private sectors to improve the conditions in which migrants live and work, with implications for HIV as well as other health outcomes.

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  • Hirsch, Jennifer S., 2014. "Labor migration, externalities and ethics: Theorizing the meso-level determinants of HIV vulnerability," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 100(C), pages 38-45.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:100:y:2014:i:c:p:38-45
    DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.10.021
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    2. I. L. Beilin* & V. V. Khomenko & N. V. Kalenskaya & A. A. Solntseva, 2018. "The Significance of the Resource Intensity of the Regional Economy the Development of the Oil and Gas Chemical Complex," The Journal of Social Sciences Research, Academic Research Publishing Group, pages 328-332:5.
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