You’ve Come a Long Way Baby: Citizens at Conception? Prenatal Personhood and SCHIP Eligibility
What are the (un)intended consequences of a citizens at conception policy? This article explores whether redefining a child does indeed spur a material expansion of benefits through the States Children’s Insurance Program (SCHIP) or whether this action can be better understood as a struggle over sym...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American behavioral scientist (Beverly Hills) 2004-07, Vol.47 (11), p.1428-1447 |
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creator | Hennessy, Judith Cliath, Alison Grace |
description | What are the (un)intended consequences of a citizens at conception policy? This article explores whether redefining a child does indeed spur a material expansion of benefits through the States Children’s Insurance Program (SCHIP) or whether this action can be better understood as a struggle over symbolic boundaries of fetal personhood, social boundaries of citizenship, and the attendant challenges to women’s reproductive rights. |
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subjects | Boundaries Child care services Children Childrens health insurance programs Citizens Citizenship Fetus Fetuses Health care Health care policy Health Care Services Policy Health Insurance Human behaviour Immigrants Indigent care Infants Noncitizens Personhood Prenatal Care Public policy Social security Studies U.S.A Women Womens health Womens rights |
title | You’ve Come a Long Way Baby: Citizens at Conception? Prenatal Personhood and SCHIP Eligibility |
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