by ghgovernance | Oct 16, 2016 | Fall 2016 Issue
Expanding Humanitarian Global Health Capacity for the Human Good Donna J. Perry and Melissa T .Ojemeni This paper proposes a three-level approach to capacity building within the context of humanitarian global health care: augmenting healthcare delivery, assisting...
by ghgovernance | Oct 16, 2016 | Fall 2016 Issue
Shaping Norms for Health Governance in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Marie Nodzenski, Kai Hong Phua, Yee Kuang Heng, and Tikki Pang While global health governance mechanisms have been studied extensively, little research has been conducted on the...
by ghgovernance | Oct 16, 2016 | Fall 2016 Issue
State Agency and Global Health Governance: The Foreign Policy and Global Health Initiative Kristin Ingstad Sandberg, Miriam Faid, and Steinar Andresen Global health governance has been a budding academic field for the last decade and can benefit from utilizing...
by ghgovernance | Oct 16, 2016 | Fall 2016 Issue
Casualties of War: Polio and the Golden Millimeter Claire Hajaj and Tuesday Reitano Polio, the archetypal disease of poverty was within a millimeter of complete eradication, thanks to incredible efforts of global-local cooperation and political will. But in recent...
by ghgovernance | Oct 16, 2016 | Fall 2016 Issue
Assessing the Importance of Tripartite Global Health Partnerships: Conducting a Nested Empirical Approach Eduardo J. Gómez In recent years, tripartite partnerships between multilateral health agencies, ministries of health, and civil society have been viewed as...
by ghgovernance | Oct 16, 2016 | Fall 2016 Issue
Mapping Foreign Affairs and Global Public Health Competencies: Towards a Competency Model for Global Health Diplomacy Matthew Brown, Julie Bergmann, Timothy Mackey, Quentin Eichbaum, Lotus McDougal and Thomas Novotny The largest Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Feature Stories, Recent Issue, Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
VOLUME X, NO. 1 SPECIAL ISSUE (SPRING 2016) TABLE OF CONTENTS EBOLA: IMPLICATIONS FOR GLOBAL HEALTH GOVERNANCE Full Text INTRODUCTION: EBOLA: IMPLICATIONS FOR GLOBAL HEALTH GOVERNANCE Joshua Busby, Karen A. Grépin and Jeremy Youde COMMENTARY: NORMS WON’T SAVE YOU:...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Current Issue, Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Alexandra Kaasch The Ebola outbreak has led numerous global policy actors to call for strengthening health systems. This article discusses these developments employing a global social policy approach. The article shows the contributions by major global social...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Jessica Flannery, Gabriel Seidman, Yadira Almodovar-Diaz, Usman Munir, Nurah Alamro and Suerie Moon The Ebola outbreak that began in late 2013 in West Africa resulted in 28,637 cases and 11,315 deaths as of January 3, 2016, according to the World Health...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Rosalind McCollum and Miriam Taegtmeyer The Ebola epidemic in West Africa resulted in calls for universal health coverage and revision of global health governance for emergency response. This political economy analysis identifies structural reasons why Sierra...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Maryam Deloffre United Nations Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 2177 (2014) was politically salient because it labeled the Ebola crisis as a threat to international peace and security and created UNMEER, the first-ever UN system-wide emergency health mission....
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Charles Clift The World Health Organization’s (WHO) programme of reform, begun in 2010, did not prevent the WHO from failing in getting to grips with the Ebola outbreak in 2014. At the root of its problems in fighting Ebola was the dysfunctionality inherent in its...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Tim Mackey Liberia is a country that has arguably borne the largest brunt of the 2014 Ebola Virus disease (EVD) outbreak, with the highest number of fatalities of all countries since the outbreak began in late March 2014. Though significant progress has been made...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Andrew Price-Smith and Jackson Porreca In March 2014 an 18 month-old boy died of the Ebola Zaire virus in the town of Meliandou, Guinea, near the porous borders of Sierra Leone and Liberia. The virus would soon spread inexorably throughout these three nations,...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
By Sophie Harman If the 2014 Ebola outbreak in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone tells us anything about global health politics, it is that there is a distinct difference between normatively agreeing to act on an issue (in this case a public health emergency of...
by ghgovernance | Apr 25, 2016 | Special Issue: Ebola: Implications For Global Health Governance
Guest Editors: Joshua Busby, Karen A. Grépin and Jeremy Youde In March 2014, the World Health Organization (WHO) was officially notified about cases of the virus in Guinea, however, it was not until early August 2014 that the WHO declared the outbreak a Public...