by ghgovernance | Jan 26, 2012 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS, International Institutions and Multilateral Organizations, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS/TB/Malaria
Governance Shake-up at the Global Fund: Promise or Peril? by Jack C. Chow, Guest Blogger Visiting Sharkey Scholar for Global Health at the School of Diplomacy, Seton Hall University At the 10 year mark of the establishment of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,...
by ghgovernance | Jan 23, 2012 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS
Part II on the AIDS Crisis and Learning from History: Lessons from South Africa Joshua Busby, Contributing Blogger Assistant Professor of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin This is a cross-post with Joshua Busby’s blog on “The Duck of Minerva.” In my...
by ghgovernance | Jan 17, 2012 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS
Learning from Histories of the AIDS Crisis Joshua Busby, Contributing Blogger Assistant Professor of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin This is a cross-post with Joshua Busby’s blog on “The Duck of Minerva.” What can we learn from histories of the AIDS...
by ghgovernance | Jan 9, 2012 | Donor Assistance/Aid, Global Health Governance Blog, North America
The 2012 Republican Primaries, American Conservatism, and Global Health David P. Fidler, Contributing Blogger James Louis Calamaras Professor of Law, Indiana University Maurer School of Law I imagine that, even among this blog’s readers, global health did not come to...
by ghgovernance | Jan 6, 2012 | Biological Weapons, Global Health Governance Blog, Health Security, International Law
Ruminations on the Seventh Review Conference of the BWC: More or More of the Same? David P. Fidler, Contributing GHG Blogger James Louis Calamaras Professor of Law, Indiana University Maurer School of Law States parties to the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) held...