Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2018
ISSN
1941-4145
Publisher
Saint Louis University School of Law
Language
en-US
Abstract
This essay illuminates how modern health law has been mainstreaming feminism under the auspices of health equity and social determinants research. Feminism shares with public health and health policy both the empirical impulse to identify inequality and the normative value of pursing equity in treatment. Using the Affordable Care Act's federal health insurance reforms as a case study of health equity in action, the essay exposes the feminist undercurrents of health insurance reform and the impulse toward mutuality in a body politic. The essay concludes by revisiting-from a feminist perspective-scholars' arguments that equity in health insurance is essential for human flourishing.
Recommended Citation
Elizabeth McCuskey,
The Body Politic: Federalism as Feminism in Health Reform
,
in
11
Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy
303
(2018).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.bu.edu/faculty_scholarship/3686