The Indian pharmaceutical industry has historically manufactured low-cost drugs for the global poor. Activist mobilizations at the height of the HIV/AIDS epidemic revealed a vast cost gap between global brands and Indian generics, much to the embarrassment of Euro-American corporations that were in the habit of pricing drugs for only the wealthy or well insured. As new drug access controversies focus on anticancer therapies, they reveal new flows of international capital, emergent genetic technologies, and increasingly coercive trade regimes. Together these favor multi-national corporate oligopolies, which imperil the legacy of HIV/AIDS activism and the future availability of essential life-saving drugs for the work of global public health....
International audienceSince the early 2000s, the question of access to medicines at affordable price...
Despite HIV becoming a manageable illness due to advancements in pharmaceuticals, over a million peo...
It is a vast understatement to say that the problem of access to medicines in developing countries i...
Medical policy analysts and oncologists have cautioned against the high price of anticancer drugs. T...
Access to affordable prescription drug is the critical mass of any meaningful public health policy. ...
India and the Patent Wars contributes to an international debate over the costs of medicine and rest...
Limited access to medicines in developing countries remains a major challenge to improving the healt...
This book investigates pharmaceutical regulation and the public health issue of fake or illicit medi...
In Pharmacracy, Thomas Szasz (2001) writes against the appropriation of medicine as a tool of politi...
This article examines the relationship between intellectual property (IP) and public health, with a ...
The main contemporary debates around health products may concern doubts about the therapeutic potent...
Purpose – The majority of the world's population has limited access to needed medicines. The purpose...
Products of the modern pharmaceutical industry have improved the outlook for patients with many diso...
This study explores how an 'Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)/trade regime' has generated a particu...
The objective for this article is to understand the legitimacy and limitations of US involvement in ...
International audienceSince the early 2000s, the question of access to medicines at affordable price...
Despite HIV becoming a manageable illness due to advancements in pharmaceuticals, over a million peo...
It is a vast understatement to say that the problem of access to medicines in developing countries i...
Medical policy analysts and oncologists have cautioned against the high price of anticancer drugs. T...
Access to affordable prescription drug is the critical mass of any meaningful public health policy. ...
India and the Patent Wars contributes to an international debate over the costs of medicine and rest...
Limited access to medicines in developing countries remains a major challenge to improving the healt...
This book investigates pharmaceutical regulation and the public health issue of fake or illicit medi...
In Pharmacracy, Thomas Szasz (2001) writes against the appropriation of medicine as a tool of politi...
This article examines the relationship between intellectual property (IP) and public health, with a ...
The main contemporary debates around health products may concern doubts about the therapeutic potent...
Purpose – The majority of the world's population has limited access to needed medicines. The purpose...
Products of the modern pharmaceutical industry have improved the outlook for patients with many diso...
This study explores how an 'Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)/trade regime' has generated a particu...
The objective for this article is to understand the legitimacy and limitations of US involvement in ...
International audienceSince the early 2000s, the question of access to medicines at affordable price...
Despite HIV becoming a manageable illness due to advancements in pharmaceuticals, over a million peo...
It is a vast understatement to say that the problem of access to medicines in developing countries i...