by ghgovernance | Dec 31, 2012 | Fall 2012 Special Issue: Human Security, Most Recent Issue
Improving United Nations Funding to Strengthen Global Health Governance- Amending the Helms – Biden Agreement Appendix Timothy K. Mackey and Thomas E. Novotny Global health governance is widely considered fragmented after more than a decade of inconsistent support for...
by ghgovernance | Dec 31, 2012 | Fall 2012 Special Issue: Human Security, Most Recent Issue
Japan as a Champion of Human Security Tomoko Suzuki For over a decade, Japan has been a vocal champion of the human security approach. This brief paper looks back to its genesis and how the human security approach persisted as a pillar of Japan’s foreign policy in...
by ghgovernance | Dec 31, 2012 | Fall 2012 Special Issue: Human Security, Most Recent Issue
Health and Human Security Susan Hubbard and Keiko Watanabe The 1994 Human Development Report introduced the idea of human security to the world stage. Since then, several countries—most notably Canada and Japan—have made attempts to integrate the concept into the...
by ghgovernance | Jul 10, 2012 | Book Review, Emerging Infectious Diseases, Global Health Diplomacy, Global Health Governance Blog, Health Security, United Nations
Peter Piot’s Memoir on Infectious Disease 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.” I just finished reading Peter Piot’s...