Brexit as heredity redux: Imperialism, biomedicine and the NHS in Britain

Des Fitzgerald, Amy Nicole Hinterberger, John Christopher Narayan, Ros Williams

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Abstract

What is the relationship between Brexit and biomedicine? Here we investigate the Vote Leave official campaign slogan ‘We send the EU £350 million a week. Let’s fund our NHS instead’ in order to shed new light on the nationalist stakes of Brexit. We argue that the Brexit referendum campaign must be situated within biomedical policy and practice in Britain. We propose a re-thinking of Brexit through a cultural politics of heredity to capture how biomedicine is structured around genetic understandings of ancestry and health, along with the forms of racial inheritance that structure the state and its welfare system. We explore this in three domains: the NHS and health tourism, data sharing policies between the NHS and the Home Office, and the NHS as an imperially resourced public service. Looking beyond the Brexit referendum campaign, we argue for renewed sociological attention to the relationships between racism, biology, health and inheritance in British society.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1161-1178
Number of pages18
JournalThe Sociological Review
Volume68
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2020

Keywords

  • Brexit
  • NHS
  • biomedicine
  • heredity
  • migration
  • racial nationalism
  • racism

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