Abstract

The purpose of this bibliography is to present studies from peer-reviewed and grey literature that used consultations and other participatory strategies to capture a community’s perspective of their health priorities, and of techniques used to elevate participation from the implementation phase to a more upstream phase of prioritization, policymaking and agenda setting. The focus here is of those studies that worked with marginalized populations or sub-populations. This bibliography contains four areas of research. It begins by first offering some philosophical and conceptual frameworks that link participatory interventions with inclusive policy making or agenda setting, and a rationale for prioritizing marginalized populations in such an undertaking. After situating ourselves in this manner, the second section looks at various participatory instruments for participatory consultations, for reaching out to marginalized populations, and for communicating the results to policymakers. Two sets of distinctions are made here: one between external (non-invitation) and internal (stifling of opinions) exclusion, and between mere participation and from active inclusion within consultations and within the policies. In the third section, examples of consultations that created or changed policy in various jurisdictions are shared, followed by a final section on a reflective and evaluative look at the recruitment, instruments and examples. An earlier iteration of this bibliography was created to assist a multi-country research project by the author to inform the UN Post-2015 development framework of the views of several diverse and highly marginalized populations around the world on their health-related priorities.

Highlights

  • Health priorities and agendas have been expressed in many forms and have been compiled at several forums through various national and international processes

  • Challenges and reflection on inclusive policy making we explore the challenges and reflections on issues that researchers have encountered in participatory consultations and inclusive policy making

  • Regional Development Dialogue, 27(2), 88? 100. This bibliography adds value to the research in two aspects. It brings in research on participatory consultations and applies it to policy-making or priority-setting processes, within the context of the marginalized

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Summary

Introduction

Health priorities and agendas have been expressed in many forms and have been compiled at several forums through various national and international processes. Participatory approaches that get information on health needs and priorities by consulting the community? Traditional priority-setting initiatives have preferred technical approaches such as the burden of disease information and cost-effectiveness considerations to set priorities [2]. Several disadvantages with these common methods are becoming increasingly clear in the global development community. Without community consultations, these technical approaches have largely been driven by supply-side issues such as funding availability and donor interests, contributing to creating global health policy and programs that are vertical and directed at select diseases instead of those that promote horizontal, systemwide integration and address the underlying determinants

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