The role of the state has been underplayed in scholarship on global health. Taking a historical view, this paper argues that state institutions, practices and ideologies have in fact been crucial to the realization of contemporary global health governance and to its predecessor regimes. Drawing on state theory, work on governmentality, and Third World Approaches to International Law, it traces the origins of the ‘health state’ in late colonial developmentalism, which held out the prospect of conditional independence for the subjects of European empires. Progress in health was also a key goal for nationalist governments in the global south, one which they sought to realize autonomously as part of a New International Economic Order. T...
Why have states, in a somewhat short period of time (1995-2005), suddenly decided to “cooperate” reg...
Shiffman recently summarized lessons for network effectiveness from an impressive collection of case...
In this paper, we argue that particular institutional arrangements partly explain the large and pers...
The role of the state has been underplayed in scholarship on global health. Taking a historical vi...
This article reviews the state of the literature on the politics of global health governance and ass...
During the last decades of the twentieth century it became increasingly apparent that the inter-rela...
This chapter examines the growth and evolution of non-state actors concerned with global health issu...
What does global health stem from, when is it born, how does it relate to the contemporary world ord...
Abstract Background Over the past decade, global heal...
New contours of global inequality present new challenges for global health, and require that we cons...
Abstract Shiffman recently summarized lessons for network effectiveness from an impressive collecti...
Note: In lieu of an abstract, this is the article\u27s first paragraph. As the world has become ste...
What have been the implications of Covid-19 for states in Africa? Has the pandemic accelerated the s...
Although the study of ‘the state’ as a policy actor has diminished in the shift from international t...
Background: Global constitutionalism is a way of looking at the world, at global rules and how they ...
Why have states, in a somewhat short period of time (1995-2005), suddenly decided to “cooperate” reg...
Shiffman recently summarized lessons for network effectiveness from an impressive collection of case...
In this paper, we argue that particular institutional arrangements partly explain the large and pers...
The role of the state has been underplayed in scholarship on global health. Taking a historical vi...
This article reviews the state of the literature on the politics of global health governance and ass...
During the last decades of the twentieth century it became increasingly apparent that the inter-rela...
This chapter examines the growth and evolution of non-state actors concerned with global health issu...
What does global health stem from, when is it born, how does it relate to the contemporary world ord...
Abstract Background Over the past decade, global heal...
New contours of global inequality present new challenges for global health, and require that we cons...
Abstract Shiffman recently summarized lessons for network effectiveness from an impressive collecti...
Note: In lieu of an abstract, this is the article\u27s first paragraph. As the world has become ste...
What have been the implications of Covid-19 for states in Africa? Has the pandemic accelerated the s...
Although the study of ‘the state’ as a policy actor has diminished in the shift from international t...
Background: Global constitutionalism is a way of looking at the world, at global rules and how they ...
Why have states, in a somewhat short period of time (1995-2005), suddenly decided to “cooperate” reg...
Shiffman recently summarized lessons for network effectiveness from an impressive collection of case...
In this paper, we argue that particular institutional arrangements partly explain the large and pers...