Policies of containment: immigration in the era of AIDS.
- 1 December 1994
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 84 (12) , 2011-2022
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.84.12.2011
Abstract
The US Public Health Service began the medical examination of immigrants at US ports in 1891. By 1924, national origin had become a means to justify broad-based exclusion of immigrants after Congress passed legislation restricting immigration from southern and eastern European countries. This legislation was passed based on the alleged genetic inferiority of southern and eastern Europeans. Since 1987, the United States has prohibited the entrance of immigrants infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). On the surface, a policy of excluding individuals with an inevitably fatal "communicable disease of public health significance" rests solidly in the tradition of protecting public health. But excluding immigrants with HIV is also a policy that, in practice, resembles the 1924 tradition of selective racial restriction of immigrants from "dangerous nations." Since the early 1980s, the United States has erected barriers against immigrants from particular Caribbean and African nations, whose citizens were thought to pose a threat of infecting the US blood supply with HIV.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- EditorialQuaternary Science Reviews, 1998
- Transmission from One Child to Another of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 with a Zidovudine-Resistance MutationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Understanding AIDS: historical interpretations and the limits of biomedical individualism.American Journal of Public Health, 1993
- Tourism Impacts Related to EC 92: A Look AheadJournal of Travel Research, 1992
- Comparative Tourism Development in Asia and the PacificJournal of Travel Research, 1992
- HIV and travel, no rationale for restrictionsThe Lancet, 1990
- Screening Immigrants and International Travelers for the Human Immunodeficiency VirusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- “Everywhere we go, We are in danger”: Ti Manno and the emergence of a Haitian transnational identityAmerican Ethnologist, 1990
- HIV and HTLV-I Infections in the AmericasMedicine, 1989
- EPIDEMICS AND REVOLUTIONS: CHOLERA IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY EUROPEPast & Present, 1988