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Right to Health for Migrants in Pakistan
Title statement Right to Health for Migrants in Pakistan [rukopis] / Aaleen Mehboob Additional Variant Titles Right to Health for the Migrants in Pakistan Personal name Mehboob, Aaleen, (dissertant) Translated title Right to Health for the Migrants in Pakistan Issue data 2022 Phys.des. 15000 (15 000 characters) Note Ved. práce Lucie Macková Oponent Kristýna Andrlová Another responsib. Macková, Lucie (thesis advisor) Andrlová, Kristýna, (opponent) Another responsib. Univerzita Palackého. Katedra rozvojových studií (degree grantor) Form, Genre diplomové práce master's theses UDC (043)378.2 Country Česko Language angličtina Document kind PUBLIKAČNÍ ČINNOST Title Mgr. Degree program Navazující Degree program Development Studies and Foresight Degreee discipline Development Studies and Foresight - specialization in Global Development Policy book
Kvalifikační práce Downloaded Size datum zpřístupnění 00281853-788605777.pdf 0 1 MB 31.05.2022 Posudek Typ posudku 00281853-ved-897282614.pdf Posudek vedoucího 00281853-opon-289563375.pdf Posudek oponenta
COVID-19 brought the world to a standstill, urging everyone to do their part to curtail the spread of the virus as no one was safe unless all of us were safe. Yet, those outside the privilege of clear citizenship status, in the precarious territory of statelessness, faced discrimination globally in accessing immunization services against COVID-19. Vaccination was primarily rolled out for legal residents of a country, with its records tied to identification documents. This research assesses the impact of a COVID-19 vaccination policy devised for Pakistani citizens on the undocumented Bihari, Bengali and Rohingya migrants in Karachi, Pakistan. The central objective of this research is to inductively explore the migrants' perception of COVID-19 and its treatment. The concerns and constraints of the humanitarian actors working in Karachi and a policy expert working at the national level are further employed to analyse the issue from the vantage point of those who could act as change-makers.COVID-19 brought the world to a standstill, urging everyone to do their part to curtail the spread of the virus as no one was safe unless all of us were safe. Yet, those outside the privilege of clear citizenship status, in the precarious territory of statelessness, faced discrimination globally in accessing immunization services against COVID-19. Vaccination was primarily rolled out for legal residents of a country, with its records tied to identification documents. This research assesses the impact of a COVID-19 vaccination policy devised for Pakistani citizens on the undocumented Bihari, Bengali and Rohingya migrants in Karachi, Pakistan. The central objective of this research is to inductively explore the migrants' perception of COVID-19 and its treatment. The concerns and constraints of the humanitarian actors working in Karachi and a policy expert working at the national level are further employed to analyse the issue from the vantage point of those who could act as change-makers.
Number of the records: 1