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Research Programme on Global Health Diplomacy

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Title: Research Programme on Global Health Diplomacy


1
Research Programme on Global Health Diplomacy
  • Richard Smith and Kelley Lee
  • Department of Global Health and Development

2
BACKGROUND
  • As part of the Bellagio Dialogues of 2009
    establishing GHD.net, a series of six papers were
    commissioned which concerned the scope of GHD and
    the associated research agenda that may be
    developed, synthesized in
  • Smith RD, Fidler D, Lee K (2009). Global Health
    Diplomacy Research. Trade, Foreign Policy,
    Diplomacy and Health Draft Working Paper Series,
    World Health Organization

3
GHD.Net research mission
  • GHD.Net shall engage in and disseminate research
    on all facets of GHD in order to deepen
    understanding about the problems addressed, the
    players involved, and the processes utilized.
  • GHD.Net shall facilitate research on issues and
    challenges facing developing and least-developed
    countries.
  • GHD.Nets research activities will help identify
    the characteristics of health as a foreign policy
    and diplomatic issue and provide input for policy
    debates on how to improve the protection and
    promotion of health through foreign policy and
    diplomatic means

4
SCOPE OF RESEARCH
  • research agenda needed to understand four facets
    of GHD
  • the topics to which GHD is applied
  • the actors involved in GHD
  • the process of GHD
  • the outcome of GHD

5
KEY SYNTHESIS PAPER RECOMMENDATION
  • support production of review papers
  • specific issues in GHD highlighted by meetings
  • reviews of diplomatic theory and how this might
    apply to health
  • research methodology
  • case-studies concerning a specific issue, focused
    on low- and middle-income countries, or regional
    context
  • contribute to a special issue of a high profile
    journal

6
PROJECT OVERVIEW
  • 12-month project as initial stage of longer-term
    research programme
  • outputs will be
  • 6 case-study papers, 1-2 conceptual papers, 1 (or
    more) research proposal(s) for 3-5 years
  • presented at two half-day conferences in UK
    (today!) and Asia (Singapore next week)
  • possible special issue of a journal and/or a book
    based on the case studies and associated work

7
PROJECT OBJECTIVES
  • further the development of the conceptual and
    methodological basis of the term GHD
  • conduct selected case studies which illuminate
    four specific facets of GHD as described above
  • strengthen capacity to conduct research on GHD
    and, through collaborations, establish a wider
    collaborative research network within GHD.Net
  • develop follow-on research proposal(s) for
    supporting the research stream of GHD.net to
    undertake further research, and in other regions

8
CASE STUDIES
  • 6 case studies, as identified through the GHD.Net
    Bellagio dialogue meetings in 2009, as key areas
    for exploration
  • focus on Asia
  • worlds largest and most populous continent
  • fast-paced integration in the global economy
  • emergence as key actor in international GH
  • build on established links of LSHTM in Asia
  • optimize comparative analysis across case studies
  • maximize capacity building and networking efforts

9
METHODOLOGY
  • similar broad methodology specific variation
  • systematic literature reviews (peerreviewed,
    grey literature etc)
  • semi-structured in-depth interviews with key
    informants at domestic and international level
  • recorded and transcribed
  • review of official negotiating documents as
    available
  • review by LSHTM research ethics committee

10
CASE STUDIES
  • ASEANs role in global health diplomacy
  • Adam Kamradt-Scott
  • Lessons from building Thailands capacity in GHD
  • Suriwan Thaiprayoon
  • Emerging role of China in health aid to Africa
  • Yiding Jiang
  • Chronic diseases and marketing to children in
    India
  • Rachel Irwin
  • Role of GHD in Taiwans bid to be observer in WHO
  • Jonathan Herington
  • Role of GHD in Indonesian virus sharing issue
  • Rachel Irwin

11
ASEANS ROLE IN GHD
  • ASEANs primary focus is regional security ties
    and economic integration
  • engaged to some extent in efforts to improve
    regional health since 1970s
  • increased interest in health-related activities
    post-2003 (SARS)
  • food security and safety, healthy lifestyles,
    easing trade and travel restrictions for TIHS
  • mostly focused on communicable disease control
  • reflects more conventional security concerns
    (maintain social and economic functioning) as
    much as health

12
ASEANS ROLE IN GHD
  • domestic political considerations and lack of
    trust impact on regional cooperation resulting in
    silo-style, nationally-focussed activities
  • key strengths of ASEAN w.r.t GHD
  • discussion forum, from high-level politicians to
    technical bureaucrats
  • bridges HIC and LMIC otherwise divided between
    two WHO regional offices (WPRO and SEARO)
  • challenges
  • lack of trust
  • lack of technical expertise (within the
    Secretariat) and capacity too many targets and
    objectives

13
LESSONS FROM BUILDING THAILANDS CAPACITY IN GHD
  • GHD requires stronger capacity at national level
    for
  • health agencies to interact with the wider
    diplomatic community (often focused on trade and
    security)
  • diplomatic organisations to understand and
    incorporate health concerns within wider remit
  • Thai experience of TRIPS-plus negotiations with
    USA in 1990s led to MoPH forging greater
    engagement in the trade negotiation processes to
    address health concerns

14
LESSONS FROM BUILDING THAILANDS CAPACITY IN GHD
  • build capacity in strategic, systematic and
    formalised manner
  • INNE Model Individual (International Health
    (IH) Scholar Program), Node (IHPP, Trade and
    Health Programme, etc), Network, Enabling
    environment
  • mechanisms of collaboration among agencies should
    be institutionalised rather than ad hoc
  • institutional mechanisms establish formal
    relationships, interagency cooperation via
    inter-agency committees, National Health Assembly
    (new multi-stakeholder forum)
  • informal network and personal connection also
    essential within and between countries

15
EMERGING ROLE OF CHINA IN HEALTH AID TO AFRICA
  • expansion of aid programme to Africa since 1994
  • natural resource-backed concessional loans to
    fund infrastructure built by Chinese construction
    firms (heavily tied aid)
  • China Africa Policy (2006)
  • long history of health diplomacy to Africa since
    1960s to build solidarity with developing world
  • 20,000 medical staff treating 250 million
    patients by 2009
  • construction of health infrastructure
  • Chinese youth volunteers to Africa since 2007
  • Chinese Navy medical ship launched in 2010 (500
    beds, 8 operating theatres)

16
EMERGING ROLE OF CHINA IN HEALTH AID TO AFRICA
  • early recognition of importance of soft power
    in foreign policy ( bottom up, solidarity with
    local people)
  • opportunity for China as developing country to
    create new modalities of aid
  • complex aid bureaucracy locates health aid as
    tool of foreign policy
  • risks of scaling up African presence
  • heavy emphasis on bilateral over multilateral
    channels adds to existing aid coordination
    problems
  • founding principles of non-conditionality and
    self-reliance at risk if health diplomacy too
    closely tied to economic policies

17
CHRONIC DISEASES AND MARKETING TO CHILDREN IN
INDIA
  • agreements reached at international level (via
    GHD) need to be implemented at national level
  • 63rd WHA (2010) adopted Set of Recommendations
    on the Marketing of Food and Non-alcoholic
    Beverages to Children
  • member states to create policies to reduce
    marketing of fatty, sugary, salty foods to
    children
  • appears as successful GHD (health interests
    over trade).. but is it?
  • What happens at national level after negotiations
    conclude?

18
CHRONIC DISEASES AND MARKETING TO CHILDREN IN
INDIA
  • global versus national context
  • obesity not main problem (2 children overweight,
    43 underweight) focus of problem among urban
    wealthy
  • cultural factors make recommendations
    irrelevant as reflects Western view of
    problem and how to address
  • role of non-government sector unappreciated
  • India Pledge with companies vulunteering to
    market appropriately
  • lack of coordination
  • 6 government agencies deal with food and children
  • NCD recently put agenda but lack of experience
    and resources
  • global health diplomacy trumped by national
    health diplomacy

19
ROLE OF GHD IN TAIWANS BID TO BE OBSERVER AT WHA
  • Peoples Republic of China occupying UN seat
    since 1972
  • Taiwan efforts to greater access to WHO since
    1970s
  • KMT concerted efforts to gain observer status
    from 1997
  • punctuated by SARS outbreak and IHR revision
    negotiations
  • Taiwan health authorities attend 2009 WHA (as
    Chinese Taipei) for first time since 1971
  • example of health diplomacy overcoming foreign
    policy goals?
  • was it business as usual or a new form of
    diplomacy?

20
ROLE OF GHD IN TAIWANS BID TO BE OBSERVER IN WHO
  • international health actors and fora played role
    in applying political pressure
  • health officials able to move more freely
  • health became focus of political concern (SARS,
    IHR)
  • BUT health arguments remain subordinate to
    traditional diplomatic concerns
  • observer not member, and name of Chinese Taipei
    as compromise
  • observer status renewable annually (subject to
    foreign policy decision)
  • closely enabled by state of, and dependent
    on,Beijing-Taipei relations
  • need to acknowledge role and limitations of GHD,
    and ensure engagement with traditional diplomatic
    practice to remove blocks to global health
    initiatives

21
ROLE OF GHDIN INDONESIAN VIRUS SHARING ISSUE
  • Global Influenza Surveillance Network (GISN)
    operated for 50 years
  • countries share samples of viruses which are used
    by WHO to assess which strains pose most threat
    and recommend control and vaccine production
  • 2007 Indonesia ceased sharing
  • equity and affordability of vaccines
  • accusations of threats to global health
    security
  • IGWG/OEWG negotiation resulted in framework
    passed at WHA 2011

Indonesian Minister of Health Siti Fadilah
Supari, WHA (2007)
22
ROLE OF GHDIN INDONESIAN VIRUS SHARING ISSUE
  • reasons and context for GH issues on agenda
  • breakdown of trust between Indonesia system
  • role of individuals
  • Siti Fadilah Supari (health minister) accused US
    of using samples to create biological weapons
  • US Ambassador to the UN (Richard Holbrooke)
    stated not-sharing as morally reprehensible
  • role of domestic context
  • Internal politics and wider foreign policy
  • highlight gaps in current system IHR, CBD

23
KEY LESSONS 1
  • domestic politics matters and shape GHD
    processes
  • Marketing Food to Children in India
  • Role of GHD in the Indonesian Virus Sharing Issue
  • Lessons from Building Thailands Capacity in GHD
  • The Emerging Role of China in Aid to Africa
  • Global in GHD may distract us from domestic
    interests, aspirations, and perceptions which
    shape strategies
  • need to align global with local to engage
    action

24
KEY LESSONS 2
  • Domestic institutional capacity shapes GHD
    strategies
  • Marketing Food to Children in India
  • The Emerging Role of China in Aid to Africa
  • The Role of GHD in the Indonesian Virus Sharing
    Issue
  • Need to institutionalise aspects related to wider
    global context within MoH and wider governmental
    system

25
KEY LESSONS 3
  • Importance of civil societys role in
    influencing/strengthening GHD processes
  • The Role of GHD in Taiwans Campaign to Become an
    Observer in the WHO
  • Marketing Food to Children in India
  • Lessons from Building Thailands Capacity in
    Global Health Diplomacy
  • Piggy-back on other issues
  • Capacity building at local level

26
KEY LESSONS 4
  • analysis of GHD has to be undertaken over the
    long-term as causal processes are slow moving,
    entailing gradual institutional and policy
    shifts
  • The Role of GHD in Taiwans Campaign to Become an
    Observer in the WHO
  • Lessons from Building Thailands Capacity in
    Global Health Diplomacy
  • The Emerging Role of China in Aid to Africa
  • Role of GHD in the Indonesian Virus Sharing Issue
  • Marketing Food to Children in India

27
KEY LESSONS 5
  • Impact of political regime will influence the key
    state actors and their relative involvement
  • Lessons from Building Thailands Capacity in
    Global Health Diplomacy
  • The Emerging Role of China in Aid to Africa
  • Health officials and other departments can
    identify synergies and help each other make their
    arguments more persuasive when engaging in
    international negotiations
  • rolling alliances built for specific purpose

28
RESEARCH AGENDA 1
  • need to understand more about domestic drivers
    for GHD
  • role of GHD in international image building
  • role of institutions in development of
    international agenda and engagement in GHD
  • use of domestic political science
  • origins of political, bureaucratic, and civil
    societal interests and commitment to GHD
  • why and how nations craft new domestic
    institutions for international trade negotiations
  • How do domestic politics shape global health
    negotiations?

29
RESEARCH AGENDA 2
  • What factors influence an issue being deemed a
    GHD issue?
  • national security
  • economic/financial impact
  • morbidity/mortality
  • How do global health issues relate to other new
    diplomacy issue areas?

30
RESEARCH AGENDA 3
  • Who engages in GHD?
  • To what extent is there a set of actors in GHD
    distinct from global health?
  • What is the relative power and influence of
    specific actors?
  • Are GHD actors in Asia different from actors in
    other regions?

31
RESEARCH AGENDA 4
  • Where does GHD take place?
  • What is the relative importance of formal versus
    informal settings
  • To what extent is GHD integrated with other
    realms of diplomacy/foreign policy and hence
    venues
  • How is the shifting balance of power in world
    politics affect GHD?

32
RESEARCH AGENDA 5
  • How can we judge successful GHD?
  • How important has GHD been in facilitating
    agreement on global health issues requiring
    collective action?
  • What factors influence the success or failure of
    GHD in facilitating collective action?
  • What can GHD teach us about the challenges of
    strengthening collective action in an
    increasingly global world?
  • What criteria are used to establish success and
    over what time period?

33
NEXT STEPS
  • Submissions to secure substantial future funding
    for GHD.Net research stream
  • Significant expansion of GHD.Net collaborators
    across public health and international relations
  • Enhancing capacity on GHD research
  • Publication of case-studies and other papers
  • So...over to you!

34
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