19 research outputs found

    The National Security Implications of HIV/AIDS

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    Feldbaum and colleagues look at evidence on the links between HIV and national security, and evaluate the risks and benefits of addressing HIV/AIDS as a national security issue

    Global health and national security: the need for critical engagement.

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    The security and foreign policy communities have increasingly addressed global health problems as threats to national security. Global health is a humanitarian endeavour that seeks to improve the world's health including the most vulnerable peoples, while national security works to protect the interests of people within a given state. The major statements of security policy by the United States and United Kingdom link the self-protective interests of national security with the humanitarian objectives of global health. While there is potential to expand global health activities through partnership with the security and foreign policy communities, treating global health issues as national security threats may focus attention disproportionately on countries or diseases which pose security threats to wealthy nations, rather than on the greatest threats to global health. The global health community should carefully scrutinise areas where global health and national security interests overlap

    Forging New Perspectives on Disease Surveillance

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    Forging New Perspectives on Disease Surveillance

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    For Global Health, The Past Is Not Prologue

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    Polio Vaccine: The Authors Respond

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    Diplomacy And The Polio Immunization Boycott In Northern Nigeria

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    Health as “Low Politics.”

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    <p>Adapted from Fidler (2005) <a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000226#pmed.1000226-Fidler5" target="_blank">[61]</a>.</p
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