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Global Health Governance : International Law and Public Health in a Divided World.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Heritage SeriesPublisher: Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 2005Copyright date: ©2005Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (219 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781442675377
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Global Health GovernanceDDC classification:
  • 344.04
LOC classification:
  • K3570 .A356 2005
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Conceptual Framework and Methodology -- A: The Conceptual Framework of the Study -- I: The Research Problem(s) -- II: Literature Review -- III: Clusters of Research Questions -- IV: Expected Research Findings -- B: Research Methodology -- C: Contributions of the Study -- 2 The Paradox of a Global Village in a Divided World -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: A Global Neighbourhood? -- C: A Divided World? -- D: The Globalization of Poverty: Two Levels of Inquiry on Public Health and South-North Disparities -- I: Globalization of Poverty and the Human Right to Health -- II: Globalization of Poverty, Structural Adjustment Programs, and Public Health in the Global South -- E: Bridging the South-North Health Divide: Law and Development -- F: Summary of the Arguments: Are We Still in a Global Neighbourhood? -- 3 Mutual Vulnerability and Globalization of Public Health in the Global Neighbourhood -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: Retrospective Vision: Diseases, Peoples, and Nation States in Historical Perspective -- C: Mutual Vulnerability and the Evolution of Public Health Multilateralism -- D: Mutual Vulnerability and Contemporary Public Health Multilateralism -- I: The Re-emergence of Tuberculosis as a Threat in Europe and North America -- II: 'Imported' and 'Airport' Malaria in the Global North -- E: The Obsolescence of the Distinction between National and International Public Health in a Globalizing World -- F: Summary of the Arguments: Self-interest Revisited -- 4 Vulnerability of Multilateralism and Globalization of Public Health in the Global Neighbourhood -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: Nineteenth-Century Infectious Disease Diplomacy: The Politics of Law and Public Health Among Sovereign States.
C: Nineteenth-Century Public Health Multilateralism: Its Colonial Origins and Post-Colonial Underpinnings -- D: Vulnerabilities of Contemporary Public Health Multilateralism: South-North Politics at the World Health Assembly -- E: International Law and Governance of the Mandate of the World Health Organization: Two Levels of Inquiry -- I: International Health Regulations -- II: Framework Convention on Tobacco Control -- F: A Comparative Overview of Global Public Health and Global Environmental Governance: Lessons from the Ozone Layer Convention and the Global Environmental Facility -- I: United Nations Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer 1985 -- II: The World Bank: Instrument Establishing the Global Environmental Facility -- G: Summary of the Arguments -- 5 Case Study: Global Malaria Policy and Ethno-Pharmacological/Traditional Medical Therapies for Malaria in Africa -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: WHO's Roll Back Malaria Campaign: Its Mission and Vision -- C: Traditional Medicine and Malaria in Southeastern Nigeria: Voices at the Margins -- D: Global Malaria Control Strategies: Globalization-from-Above or Globalization-from-Below? -- E: Symbiotic Approaches: The Wealth and Poverty of Theory in Multilateral Health Governance -- F: Summary of the Arguments -- 6 In Search of Prophylaxis: Communitarian Globalism and Multilateral Disease Non-Proliferation Facility -- A: Overview of the Arguments and a Summary of Recommendations -- B: Communitarian Globalism: A Proposal for WHO-World Bank Collaboration -- C: Towards a Disease Non-Proliferation Facility: An Argument for a Global Health Fund -- D: Governance of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria -- E: Rethinking the Concepts of Mutual Vulnerability, Globalization of Disease, and Enlightened Self-Interest -- F: Communitarian Globalism and Nation States.
G: Communitarian Globalism, Non-State Actors, and Global Civil Society -- H: Fidelity to Humanity: Bridging the South-North Health Divide - Prophylaxis for Better Health -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y.
Summary: Drawing from a wide range of disciplines, Global Health Governanceoffers a holistic approach to global health governance involving a multiplicity of actors: nation-states, international organizations, civil society organizations, and private actors.
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Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Conceptual Framework and Methodology -- A: The Conceptual Framework of the Study -- I: The Research Problem(s) -- II: Literature Review -- III: Clusters of Research Questions -- IV: Expected Research Findings -- B: Research Methodology -- C: Contributions of the Study -- 2 The Paradox of a Global Village in a Divided World -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: A Global Neighbourhood? -- C: A Divided World? -- D: The Globalization of Poverty: Two Levels of Inquiry on Public Health and South-North Disparities -- I: Globalization of Poverty and the Human Right to Health -- II: Globalization of Poverty, Structural Adjustment Programs, and Public Health in the Global South -- E: Bridging the South-North Health Divide: Law and Development -- F: Summary of the Arguments: Are We Still in a Global Neighbourhood? -- 3 Mutual Vulnerability and Globalization of Public Health in the Global Neighbourhood -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: Retrospective Vision: Diseases, Peoples, and Nation States in Historical Perspective -- C: Mutual Vulnerability and the Evolution of Public Health Multilateralism -- D: Mutual Vulnerability and Contemporary Public Health Multilateralism -- I: The Re-emergence of Tuberculosis as a Threat in Europe and North America -- II: 'Imported' and 'Airport' Malaria in the Global North -- E: The Obsolescence of the Distinction between National and International Public Health in a Globalizing World -- F: Summary of the Arguments: Self-interest Revisited -- 4 Vulnerability of Multilateralism and Globalization of Public Health in the Global Neighbourhood -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: Nineteenth-Century Infectious Disease Diplomacy: The Politics of Law and Public Health Among Sovereign States.

C: Nineteenth-Century Public Health Multilateralism: Its Colonial Origins and Post-Colonial Underpinnings -- D: Vulnerabilities of Contemporary Public Health Multilateralism: South-North Politics at the World Health Assembly -- E: International Law and Governance of the Mandate of the World Health Organization: Two Levels of Inquiry -- I: International Health Regulations -- II: Framework Convention on Tobacco Control -- F: A Comparative Overview of Global Public Health and Global Environmental Governance: Lessons from the Ozone Layer Convention and the Global Environmental Facility -- I: United Nations Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer 1985 -- II: The World Bank: Instrument Establishing the Global Environmental Facility -- G: Summary of the Arguments -- 5 Case Study: Global Malaria Policy and Ethno-Pharmacological/Traditional Medical Therapies for Malaria in Africa -- A: Overview of the Argument -- B: WHO's Roll Back Malaria Campaign: Its Mission and Vision -- C: Traditional Medicine and Malaria in Southeastern Nigeria: Voices at the Margins -- D: Global Malaria Control Strategies: Globalization-from-Above or Globalization-from-Below? -- E: Symbiotic Approaches: The Wealth and Poverty of Theory in Multilateral Health Governance -- F: Summary of the Arguments -- 6 In Search of Prophylaxis: Communitarian Globalism and Multilateral Disease Non-Proliferation Facility -- A: Overview of the Arguments and a Summary of Recommendations -- B: Communitarian Globalism: A Proposal for WHO-World Bank Collaboration -- C: Towards a Disease Non-Proliferation Facility: An Argument for a Global Health Fund -- D: Governance of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria -- E: Rethinking the Concepts of Mutual Vulnerability, Globalization of Disease, and Enlightened Self-Interest -- F: Communitarian Globalism and Nation States.

G: Communitarian Globalism, Non-State Actors, and Global Civil Society -- H: Fidelity to Humanity: Bridging the South-North Health Divide - Prophylaxis for Better Health -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y.

Drawing from a wide range of disciplines, Global Health Governanceoffers a holistic approach to global health governance involving a multiplicity of actors: nation-states, international organizations, civil society organizations, and private actors.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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