2022
DOI: 10.16888/interd.2023.40.1.22
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Ser paciente haitiano/a en Chile y vivir el racismo en centros de la red pública de salud

Abstract: The present work is inscribed within the field of contemporary migration studies in Chile, a line of investigation initiated during the nineties. At the time, various people from South America and the Caribbean arrived to the country, which was undergoing a democratic

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Throughout the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century, the Republic of Chile attracted some degree of European and Middle Eastern migration, slowing to a crawl during the long military dictatorship 1970s and 80s; from the 1990s, Perú became the main source of immigrants, with other waves emerging from Bolivia, Colombia and Ecuador 7 , 8 , and more recently Venezuela and Haiti 9 . With increased immigration, Chile faces a gamut of related issues, including integration into wider society, and issues of equity and human rights 10 12 Table 1 lays out the accelerating growth in immigrant numbers:…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Throughout the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century, the Republic of Chile attracted some degree of European and Middle Eastern migration, slowing to a crawl during the long military dictatorship 1970s and 80s; from the 1990s, Perú became the main source of immigrants, with other waves emerging from Bolivia, Colombia and Ecuador 7 , 8 , and more recently Venezuela and Haiti 9 . With increased immigration, Chile faces a gamut of related issues, including integration into wider society, and issues of equity and human rights 10 12 Table 1 lays out the accelerating growth in immigrant numbers:…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…www.nature.com/scientificreports/ related issues, including integration into wider society, and issues of equity and human rights [10][11][12] Table 1 lays out the accelerating growth in immigrant numbers: As of December 31, 2021, the countries of Venezuela (30%), Peru (16.6%), Haiti (12.2%), Colombia (11.7%), and Bolivia (8.9%) accounted for the majority of foreign nationals registered as residents in Chile. The proportion of males (744,213) to females (738,177) was somewhat higher.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%