Structural Stigma, Legal Epidemiology, and COVID-19: The Ethical Imperative to Act Upstream

Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 30 (3):339-359 (2020)
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Abstract

The primary claim of this paper is that COVID-19 stigma must be understood as a structural phenomenon. Doing so will inform the interventions we select and prioritize for the amelioration of such stigma. Thinking about stigma as a macrosocial determinant of health driven by structural factors suggests that downstream remedies are unlikely to be effective in significantly reducing stigma. This paper develops and defends this claim, setting up a recommendation to use a “bundle” of legal and policy levers at meso- and macro- levels to reduce the adverse and inequitable impact of COVID-19 stigma.Historians of public health have long pointed out that outbreaks of communicable disease track social fault lines (Rosenberg...

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