Abstract

Many moral wrongs allegedly take place due to the migration of skilled health workers from the developing to the developed world. In many cases, the immorality of this kind of migration is taken to be self-evident, as is the need for reforms aimed at creating an ethical system of health worker migration. While it might be uncontroversial that the ‘brain drain’ created by the migration of skilled workers out of the developing world is morally troubling, there is a danger in not clarifying and assessing charges of moral wrongdoing.

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