As decolonisation awareness and activism amplifies in the mainstream masses and within academic realms across a variety of fields, the time is right to converge parallel movements to decolonise the fields of global health and evaluation by restructuring relations of dependency and domination reified through the “foreign gaze”1 or “white gaze.” We conducted a review of relevant records with the following inclusion criteria–they define or advocate for the decolonisation of global health evaluation or explicate methods, policies or interventions to decolonise global health evaluation published by advocates of the decolonisation movement from both fields. These records were derived following a systematic article search by the lead autthor on Go...
Recognition of the relevance of colonial history to the contemporary practice of global health is no...
Socio-ecological factors associated with decolonisation of global health evaluation.</p
The global health movement is having a paradigm crisis—a period characterised by a questioning of on...
There are increasing calls to decolonise aspects of science, and global health is no exception. The ...
The current movement to ‘decolonize’ global health aims to both dismantle colonial frameworks that p...
There has been much talk about decolonizing global health lately. The movement, which has arisen in ...
Global Health is experiencing a moment of reckoning over the field's legacy and current structuring ...
Despite taking on several forms throughout history such as colonial medicine, tropical medicine, and...
Evaluations play a critical role in shaping the way international development interventions are desi...
BackgroundIn recent years the Groningen Centre for Health Law (‘GCHL’ - formerly the Global Health L...
Globalisation, in a broad sense, holds considerable potential for improving human health, while pre...
The COVID-19 pandemic has both highlighted and exacerbated global health inequities, leading for cal...
Many global health volunteer experiences and research projects are focused on the needs of the host ...
Epistemic injustice is a growing area of study for researchers and practitioners working in the fiel...
Founded in 2005, Globalization and Health was the first open access global health journal. The journ...
Recognition of the relevance of colonial history to the contemporary practice of global health is no...
Socio-ecological factors associated with decolonisation of global health evaluation.</p
The global health movement is having a paradigm crisis—a period characterised by a questioning of on...
There are increasing calls to decolonise aspects of science, and global health is no exception. The ...
The current movement to ‘decolonize’ global health aims to both dismantle colonial frameworks that p...
There has been much talk about decolonizing global health lately. The movement, which has arisen in ...
Global Health is experiencing a moment of reckoning over the field's legacy and current structuring ...
Despite taking on several forms throughout history such as colonial medicine, tropical medicine, and...
Evaluations play a critical role in shaping the way international development interventions are desi...
BackgroundIn recent years the Groningen Centre for Health Law (‘GCHL’ - formerly the Global Health L...
Globalisation, in a broad sense, holds considerable potential for improving human health, while pre...
The COVID-19 pandemic has both highlighted and exacerbated global health inequities, leading for cal...
Many global health volunteer experiences and research projects are focused on the needs of the host ...
Epistemic injustice is a growing area of study for researchers and practitioners working in the fiel...
Founded in 2005, Globalization and Health was the first open access global health journal. The journ...
Recognition of the relevance of colonial history to the contemporary practice of global health is no...
Socio-ecological factors associated with decolonisation of global health evaluation.</p
The global health movement is having a paradigm crisis—a period characterised by a questioning of on...