Medicaid’s cooperative federalism structure gives states significant discretion to include or exclude various categories of immigrants. This has created extreme geographic variability in immigrants’ access to health coverage. This Article describes federalism’s role in influencing state policies on immigrant eligibility for Medicaid and its implications for national health policy. Although there are disagreements over the extent to which public funds should be used to subsidize immigrant health coverage, this Article reveals that decentralized policymaking on immigrant access to Medicaid has weakened national health policy. It has failed to incentivize the type of state policy experimentation and replication that justifies federalism arrang...
Arizona's state-level policies restricting undocumented immigrants' access to public benefits contin...
The question of whether illegal immigrants should be entitled to some form of health coverage in the...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...
Medicaid’s cooperative federalism structure gives states significant discretion to include or exclud...
The rapid growth of the immigrant population in the U.S., along with changes in the demographics and...
Noncitizens lawfully residing in the United States are considered a “discrete and insular minority” ...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...
The working–age, adult immigrant population living in the United States is often left out of h...
The working–age, adult immigrant population living in the United States is often left out of h...
Federal policies enacted over the last 50 years have created barriers for noncitizens to access the ...
Despite the important role that immigrants play in the U.S. economy, they disproportionately lack he...
It is increasingly common for noncitizens living in the United States to avoid seeing a doctor or en...
It is increasingly common for noncitizens living in the United States to avoid seeing a doctor or en...
This Article is one of only a small number of proposals over the past forty-six years for federalizi...
Provides an overview of the current rules on immigrants' eligibility for Medicaid and the State Chil...
Arizona's state-level policies restricting undocumented immigrants' access to public benefits contin...
The question of whether illegal immigrants should be entitled to some form of health coverage in the...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...
Medicaid’s cooperative federalism structure gives states significant discretion to include or exclud...
The rapid growth of the immigrant population in the U.S., along with changes in the demographics and...
Noncitizens lawfully residing in the United States are considered a “discrete and insular minority” ...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...
The working–age, adult immigrant population living in the United States is often left out of h...
The working–age, adult immigrant population living in the United States is often left out of h...
Federal policies enacted over the last 50 years have created barriers for noncitizens to access the ...
Despite the important role that immigrants play in the U.S. economy, they disproportionately lack he...
It is increasingly common for noncitizens living in the United States to avoid seeing a doctor or en...
It is increasingly common for noncitizens living in the United States to avoid seeing a doctor or en...
This Article is one of only a small number of proposals over the past forty-six years for federalizi...
Provides an overview of the current rules on immigrants' eligibility for Medicaid and the State Chil...
Arizona's state-level policies restricting undocumented immigrants' access to public benefits contin...
The question of whether illegal immigrants should be entitled to some form of health coverage in the...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...