Shiffman rightly raises questions about who exercises power in global health, suggesting power is a complex concept, and the way it is exercised is often opaque. Power that is not based on financial strength but on knowledge or experience, is difficult to estimate, and yet it may provide the legitimacy to make moral claims on what is, or ought to be, on global health agendas. Twenty years ago power was exercised in a much less complex health environment. The World Health Organization (WHO) was able to exert its authority as world health leader. The landscape today is very different. Financial resources for global health are being competed for by diverse organisations, and power is diffused and somewh...
The editorial by Jeremy Shiffman, “Knowledge, moral claims and the exercise of power in global healt...
Jeremy Shiffman’s editorial appropriately calls on making all forms of power more apparent and accou...
In this comment, I build on Shiffman’s call for the global health community to more d...
Shiffman rightly raises questions about who exercises power in global health, suggesting power is a ...
Shiffman rightly raises questions about who exercises power in global health, suggesting power is a ...
A number of individuals and organizations have considerable influence over the selection of global h...
A number of individuals and organizations have considerable influence over the selection of global h...
This article agrees with recent arguments suggesting that normative and epistemic power is rife with...
Jeremy Shiffman’s editorial appropriately calls on making all forms of power more apparent and accou...
Shiffman has argued that some actors have a great deal of power in global health, and...
Actors working in global health often portray it as an enterprise grounded in principled concerns, a...
This article agrees with recent arguments suggesting that normative and epistemic power is rife with...
The editorial by Jeremy Shiffman, “Knowledge, moral claims and the exercise of power in global hea...
In this paper we emphasize the importance of questioning the global validity of significant concepts...
Shiffman has argued that some actors have a great deal of power in global health, and that more refl...
The editorial by Jeremy Shiffman, “Knowledge, moral claims and the exercise of power in global healt...
Jeremy Shiffman’s editorial appropriately calls on making all forms of power more apparent and accou...
In this comment, I build on Shiffman’s call for the global health community to more d...
Shiffman rightly raises questions about who exercises power in global health, suggesting power is a ...
Shiffman rightly raises questions about who exercises power in global health, suggesting power is a ...
A number of individuals and organizations have considerable influence over the selection of global h...
A number of individuals and organizations have considerable influence over the selection of global h...
This article agrees with recent arguments suggesting that normative and epistemic power is rife with...
Jeremy Shiffman’s editorial appropriately calls on making all forms of power more apparent and accou...
Shiffman has argued that some actors have a great deal of power in global health, and...
Actors working in global health often portray it as an enterprise grounded in principled concerns, a...
This article agrees with recent arguments suggesting that normative and epistemic power is rife with...
The editorial by Jeremy Shiffman, “Knowledge, moral claims and the exercise of power in global hea...
In this paper we emphasize the importance of questioning the global validity of significant concepts...
Shiffman has argued that some actors have a great deal of power in global health, and that more refl...
The editorial by Jeremy Shiffman, “Knowledge, moral claims and the exercise of power in global healt...
Jeremy Shiffman’s editorial appropriately calls on making all forms of power more apparent and accou...
In this comment, I build on Shiffman’s call for the global health community to more d...