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- Title
Colonial Neglect and the Right to Health in Puerto Rico After Hurricane Maria.
- Authors
Joseph, Samantha Rivera; Voyles, Caroline; Williams, Kimberly D.; Smith, Erica; Chilton, Mariana
- Abstract
The humanitarian crisis revealed as a result of Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico demonstrates a long history of US colonial neglect and human rights violations. This reality has made it especially difficult for the people of Puerto Rico to achieve their right to the highest attainable standard of health. The impacts are pervasive, resulting in disparities in Puerto Rican health, including water access and quality; wealth, including economic loss and disinvestment; and sustainability of the island's resources. As a result of failed governmental protection and support, public health issues related to access to care, a failing infrastructure, and discrimination all contributed to crisis on the island. A human rights framework is necessary to assess the ongoing human rights violations of the quality of life to support millions of American citizens on the island. This essay utilizes a rights-based approach to reveal historical disenfranchisement of Puerto Rico before the storms, identifies the specific human rights violations that resulted from the US government's lack of emergency preparedness and responsiveness, and demands rebuilding the island to reconcile all that has been lost.
- Subjects
PUERTO Rico; HURRICANE Maria, 2017; DISCRIMINATION (Sociology); EMERGENCY management; HEALTH services accessibility; HUMAN rights; NATURAL disasters; PUBLIC administration; PUBLIC health; PUBLIC health administration; QUALITY of life; WATER supply; HEALTH equity
- Publication
American Journal of Public Health, 2020, Vol 110, Issue 10, p1512
- ISSN
0090-0036
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2105/AJPH.2020.305814