by ghgovernance | Jan 31, 2013 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS, Latin America, Uncategorized, World Health Organization
Understanding the Geopolitics of Epidemics: How Brazil Outpaced the other BRICS in Response Eduardo J. Gómez, Contributing Blogger Assistant Professor, Department of Public Policy & Administration at Rutgers University Despite their similar geopolitical interests...
by ghgovernance | Dec 31, 2012 | Fall 2012 Special Issue: Human Security, HIV/AIDS, Maternal Health
The Brazilian Response to AIDS from the 1980s to 2010- Civil Society Mobilization and AIDS Policy Jane Galvão, Francisco I. Bastos and Amy Nunn Brazil is renowned for its progressive and early response to the AIDS epidemic. Brazil was among the first countries to...
by ghgovernance | Dec 31, 2012 | Fall 2012 Special Issue: Human Security, Global Health Diplomacy, HIV/AIDS, Most Recent Issue
Understanding Brazilian Global Health Diplomacy- Social Health Movements, Institutional Infiltration, and the Geopolitics of Accessing HIV_AIDS Medication Eduardo J. Gómez Global Health Diplomacy (GHD) is a new area of scholarly research. While much has been written...
by ghgovernance | Dec 31, 2012 | Fall 2012 Special Issue: Human Security, HIV/AIDS, Most Recent Issue
Provoking a New Agenda for Global Human Security Jack C. Chow The evolution of security from traditional defense-oriented issues toward human needs, both communal and individual, is approaching a time of turbulence and uncertainty in 2013. The driving factors that led...
by ghgovernance | Dec 21, 2012 | HIV/AIDS
The End of AIDS? I Don’t Think So! By Laurie Garrett, Guest Blogger Senior Fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign Relations This is a co-post with Laurie Garrett’s blog which can be found at www.lauriegarrett.com. This week I got the sad, anger-provoking news...
by ghgovernance | Dec 3, 2012 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS, United Nations
World AIDS Day 2012: A Moment for Optimism? 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.” Today is World AIDS Day, an annual opportunity...
by ghgovernance | Nov 27, 2012 | Global Health Diplomacy, Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS, Maternal Health, United Nations
Healthy Development int he Post-2015 Era Yanzhong Huang, Editor Senior Fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign Relations This is a cross-post with CFR’s Development Channel Blog. Yanzhong Huang guest blogs for contributing editor Terra Lawson-Remer. On...
by ghgovernance | Oct 5, 2012 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS
How to Survive a Plague 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 am putting the finishing touches on a new book manuscript on...
by ghgovernance | Jul 25, 2012 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS, Transnational Campaigns
An AIDS-Free Generation? HIV Is Not A Fad 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.” The International AIDS Society conference began...
by ghgovernance | Jun 22, 2012 | Donor Assistance/Aid, Governance, HIV/AIDS, Spring 2012
Regional HIV-AIDS Work- An Added Value Peris S. Jones and Siri B. Hellevik Regional level responses to HIV/AIDS have become increasingly in vogue. Beyond the symbolism and established truisms associated with regional integration, however, much less is known about the...
by ghgovernance | May 30, 2012 | Global Health Diplomacy, Global Health Governance Blog, Health Security, Health Technology, HIV/AIDS, International Health Regulations, International Institutions and Multilateral Organizations, World Health Organization
25 by 25: The New 3 by 5? Derek Yach, Larry Gostin & Devi Sridhar, Contributing Bloggers Devi Sridhar is Lecturer in Global Health Politics at Oxford University. Lawrence O. Gostin is Professor of Law at Georgetown University, Faculty Director of the O’Neill...
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 | Dec 2, 2011 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS
World AIDS Day 2011: Cause for Optimism or Alarm? 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.” Three weeks ago, Hillary...
by ghgovernance | Dec 1, 2011 | Global Health Governance Blog, HIV/AIDS
Failure Is Not Acceptable on World AIDS Day — But Neither is Staying the Course By Laurie Garrett, Guest Blogger Senior Fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign Relations This is a co-post with Laurie Garrett’s blog which can be found at...