Background: A number of studies have evaluated the effect of a right to health as a mechanism for achieving desirable health outcomes, yet no study has sought institutional conditions that make this mechanism more effective at population level.I hypothesise whether a right to health is only an effective instrument for improving health in countries that demonstrate good governance in which effective mechanisms for enforcing the right to health, as well as controlling government behaviour, exist. Method: Annual data from 1970 to 2007 was obtained for a panel of 157 countries, to study the effects of introducing into national constitutions an explicit, enforceable, right to health and democratic governance on infant and under-five mortality ra...
Background: The effects of political regimes on health are unclear because empirical evidence is nei...
Although no systematic causal review has yet been done, the evidence of a relation between democracy...
Do democracies produce better health outcomes for children than autocracies? We argue that (1) democ...
Many scholars claim that democracy improves population health. The prevailing explanation for this i...
In recent decades there has been an increasing trend toward “constitutionalizing” health—identifying...
This is the author accepted manuscriptIn this paper, we study the extent to which the spread of demo...
Many studies find that democratic governance improves population health. However, few offer a rigoro...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Many scholars claim that democracy improves population health....
The importance of good governance for the health of populations has hardly been researched even thou...
Objectives: To explore whether the rule of law is a foundational determinant of health that underlie...
Can political regimes be singled out as a factor affecting health? Rating countries by the extent of...
This study tests the relationship between democracy and population health. Some studies argue that d...
It has been long debated whether regime types have impacts on human development. More specifically, ...
The importance of good governance for the health of populations has hardly been researched even thou...
SummaryBackgroundThe effects of political regimes on health are unclear because empirical evidence i...
Background: The effects of political regimes on health are unclear because empirical evidence is nei...
Although no systematic causal review has yet been done, the evidence of a relation between democracy...
Do democracies produce better health outcomes for children than autocracies? We argue that (1) democ...
Many scholars claim that democracy improves population health. The prevailing explanation for this i...
In recent decades there has been an increasing trend toward “constitutionalizing” health—identifying...
This is the author accepted manuscriptIn this paper, we study the extent to which the spread of demo...
Many studies find that democratic governance improves population health. However, few offer a rigoro...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Many scholars claim that democracy improves population health....
The importance of good governance for the health of populations has hardly been researched even thou...
Objectives: To explore whether the rule of law is a foundational determinant of health that underlie...
Can political regimes be singled out as a factor affecting health? Rating countries by the extent of...
This study tests the relationship between democracy and population health. Some studies argue that d...
It has been long debated whether regime types have impacts on human development. More specifically, ...
The importance of good governance for the health of populations has hardly been researched even thou...
SummaryBackgroundThe effects of political regimes on health are unclear because empirical evidence i...
Background: The effects of political regimes on health are unclear because empirical evidence is nei...
Although no systematic causal review has yet been done, the evidence of a relation between democracy...
Do democracies produce better health outcomes for children than autocracies? We argue that (1) democ...