CONSTITUTIONALISM AND JUDICIALIZATION OF POLITICS: THE “JUDICIAL” RIGHT TO HEALTHCARE IN BRAZIL

Bruno Irion Coletto, Pedro da Silva Moreira

Abstract


The right to healthcare in Brazil is seriously protected by the courts. Judicialization of everyday implementation of this public policy is a fact. One explanation may be provided by the way judges understand the effectiveness of this right. People hold subjective right to individualized healthcare benefits, and so they hold standing to sue the state in order to achieve it, regardless any consideration of public policies. Through an analysis of the jurisprudence on this issue, this paper aims to provide a critical understanding not just about what is actually happening in Brazilian courts regarding healthcare, but also to criticize it. The conclusion is that a “strong” conception of constitutionalism and fundamental rights may revel itself as “weak,” from the standpoint of general equality. Judicialization ends up empting the public debate, leading the task of solving the distribution of scarce resources to a “gowned aristocracy.”

 

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.17768/pbl.y3.n3-4.p358-393

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Copyright (c) 2018 Bruno Irion Coletto, Pedro da Silva Moreira

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

QUALIS/CAPES

B3 - Interdisciplinar

B3 - Ciências Políticas e Relações Internacionais

C   - Direito

ISSN

2318-1516 (Online)

1075-1343 (Print)

INDEXES