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Right to health and access to health-care services for refugees in Turkey

N. Ela Gokalp Aras (Swedish Research Institute in Istanbul (SRII), Istanbul, Turkey)
Sertan Kabadayi (Gabelli School of Business, Fordham University, New York, New York, USA)
Emir Ozeren (Faculty of Tourism, Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir, Turkey and Centre for Inclusive and Sustainable Entrepreneurship and Innovation (CISEI), University of Southampton, Southampton, UK)
Erhan Aydin (Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Usak University, Usak, Turkey and IPAG Business School, Paris, France)

Journal of Services Marketing

ISSN: 0887-6045

Article publication date: 8 April 2021

Issue publication date: 12 November 2021

831

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of factors that contribute to refugees’ exclusion from health-care services. More specifically, using institutional theory, this paper identifies regulative pillar-, normative pillar- and cultural/cognitive pillar-related challenges that result in refugees having limited or no access to health-care services.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper draws on both secondary research and empirical insights from two qualitative fieldwork studies totaling 37 semi-structured meso-level interviews, observations and focus groups in three Turkish cities (Izmir, Ankara and Edirne), as well as a total of 42 micro-level, semi-structured interviews with refugees and migrants in one large city (Izmir) in Turkey.

Findings

This study reveals that systematically stratified legal statuses result in different levels of access to public health-care services for migrants, asylum seekers or refugees based on their fragmented protection statuses. The findings suggest access to health-care is differentiated not only between local citizens and refugees but also among the refugees and migrants based on their legal status as shaped by their country of origin.

Originality/value

While the role of macro challenges such as laws and government regulations in shaping policies about refugees have been examined in other fields, the impact of such factors on refugee services and well-being has been largely ignored in service literature in general, as well as transformative service research literature in particular. This study is one of the first attempts by explicitly including macro-level factors to contribute to the discussion on the refugees’ access to public health-care services in a host country by relying on the institutional theory by providing a holistic understanding of cognitive, normative and regulative factors in understanding service exclusion problem.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The field research was supported and funded by the EU through a Horizon 2020 project called “RESPOND Multilevel Governance of Migration in Europe and Beyond” (770564). Thus, the first author thanks to the RESPOND Project and the Turkey research team members, namely Prof. Dr Ayhan Kaya, Dr Zeynep Sahin Mencutek and Dr Susan Rottmann.

Citation

Gokalp Aras, N.E., Kabadayi, S., Ozeren, E. and Aydin, E. (2021), "Right to health and access to health-care services for refugees in Turkey", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 35 No. 7, pp. 962-976. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSM-06-2020-0256

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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