The global debate over HIV-related travel restrictions: Framing and policy change

Abstract In 2010, the US repealed Section 212(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which stated that a non-citizen determined to have a ‘communicable disease of public health significance’, is not admissible into the country without a waiver. This included HIV+ non-citizens. In the same year, several other countries, including China and South Korea, removed similar restrictions. This paper examines the global debate over HIV-related travel restrictions that has been ongoing since the mid-1980s and attempts to account for these recent policy changes. Entry restrictions have almost always been justified as necessary in two ways: to protect public health from the supposed threat posed by the entry of people living with HIV, and to limit the costs HIV+ migrants impose on domestic health systems. Opponents of these restrictions have consistently sought to challenge the evidence underpinning these claims and also to re-frame the issue in rights terms. However, in this paper I argue that this re-framing was not in itself sufficient to bring about policy change. Contributing to the literature on norm building and transnational advocacy both within and beyond global health, this article argues that some other crucial factors also have to be taken into account, including the changing political context (both domestic and international) and the network building strategies employed by opponents of the restrictions from 2008 onwards.

[1]  Erle C. Ellis A world of our making , 2011 .

[2]  R. Labonté,et al.  Framing health and foreign policy: lessons for global health diplomacy , 2010, Globalization and health.

[3]  S. Luchters,et al.  Sex work and the 2010 FIFA World Cup: time for public health imperatives to prevail , 2010, Globalization and health.

[4]  A. Whiteside,et al.  The history of AIDS exceptionalism , 2010, Journal of the International AIDS Society.

[5]  N. Bristol USA looks set to repeal HIV travel ban , 2009, The Lancet.

[6]  J. Amon,et al.  Fear of Foreigners: HIV-related restrictions on entry, stay, and residence , 2008, Journal of the International AIDS Society.

[7]  J. Shiffman,et al.  Generation of political priority for global health initiatives: a framework and case study of maternal mortality , 2007, The Lancet.

[8]  F. Al-Maskari,et al.  Break the silence: HIV/AIDS knowledge, attitudes, and educational needs among Arab university students in United Arab Emirates. , 2007, The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine.

[9]  R. Miller,et al.  Knowledge, attitudes and health outcomes in HIV‐infected travellers to the USA , 2006, HIV medicine.

[10]  Alexander Wendt,et al.  La anarquía es lo que los estados hacen de ella:la construcción social de la política de poder | Anarchy is what states make of it: the Social Construction of Power Politics , 2005 .

[11]  G. Behrman The Invisible People: How the U.S. Has Slept Through the Global AIDS Pandemic, the Greatest Humanitarian Catastrophe of Our Time , 2004 .

[12]  Keith F Widaman,et al.  HIV-related stigma and knowledge in the United States: prevalence and trends, 1991-1999. , 2002, American journal of public health.

[13]  F. Dubois-Arber,et al.  The normalization of AIDS in Western European countries. , 2000, Social science & medicine.

[14]  Alexander Wendt Social Theory of International Politics: “Ideas all the way down?”: on the constitution of power and interest , 1999 .

[15]  M. Barnett,et al.  Culture, Strategy and Foreign Policy Change: , 1999 .

[16]  M. Finnemore,et al.  International Norm Dynamics and Political Change , 1998, International Organization.

[17]  B. Larke The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance. , 1995 .

[18]  M. Duckett,et al.  AIDS‐related migration and travel policies and restrictions: a global survey , 1989, AIDS.

[19]  S. Miles,et al.  And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic , 1988 .

[20]  Alexander Wendt,et al.  The agent-structure problem in international relations theory , 1987, International Organization.

[21]  Leonard J. Nelson International Travel Restrictions and the Aids Epidemic , 1987, American Journal of International Law.

[22]  N. Fenton The Personal Interview , 1934 .

[23]  Simon Rushton Framing AIDS : Securitization , Development-ization , Rights-ization , 2010 .

[24]  P. Hill,et al.  Applying the principles of AIDS ‘Exceptionality’ to global health : challenges for Global Health Governance , 2010 .

[25]  A. Whiteside Is AIDS exceptional , 2009 .

[26]  Francesca Polletta,et al.  Activists Beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics , 1998 .

[27]  Sarah N Qureshi Global ostracism of HIV-positive aliens: international restrictions barring HIV-positive aliens. , 1995, Maryland journal of international law and trade.

[28]  M. Wojcik,et al.  International Health Law, International Travel Restrictions, and the Human Rights of Persons with AIDS and HIV, 1 Touro J. Transnat'l L. 285 (1990) , 1990 .

[29]  A. Hendriks The Right to Freedom of Movement and the (Un)lawfulness of AIDS/HIV Specific Travel Restrictions from a European Perspective , 1990 .