Abstract

ABSTRACTThis comparative case study investigated how two intergovernmental organisations without formal health mandates – the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) – have engaged with global health issues. Triangulating insights from key institutional documents, ten semi-structured interviews with senior officials, and scholarly books tracing the history of both organisations, the study identified an evolving and broadened engagement with global health issues in UNDP and WTO. Within WTO, the dominant view was that enhancing international trade is instrumental to improving global health, although the need to resolve tensions between public health objectives and WTO agreements was recognised. For UNDP, interviewees reported that the agency gained prominence in global health for its response to HIV/AIDS in the 1990s and early 2000s. Learning from that experience, the agency has evolved and expanded its role in two respects: it has increasingly facilitated processes to provide global normative direction for global health issues such as HIV/AIDS and access to medicines, and it has expanded its focus beyond HIV/AIDS. Overall, the study findings suggest the need for seeking greater integration among international institutions, closing key global institutional gaps, and establishing a shared global institutional space for promoting action on the broader determinants of health.

Highlights

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) holds the mandate as the ‘directing and coordinating authority on international health work’ (WHO, 1946)

  • This study aimed to address this research question by investigating how United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) have conceptualised their roles in global health, exploring how these institutions’ relationship with global health have evolved over time, and identifying barriers and opportunities for collaboration across institutions

  • An evolving and broadened engagement with global health issues can be observed in both WTO and UNDP

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Summary

Introduction

The World Health Organization (WHO) holds the mandate as the ‘directing and coordinating authority on international health work’ (WHO, 1946). Working in parallel with WHO, the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) lead global efforts in two other sectors with substantial health impact: those of trade and development, respectively. Outline some of the global governance challenges that you encounter in your work Do these have an impact on global health? In the day-to-day affairs of your organisation, how is the advancement of global health conceptualised and framed in relation to the organisation’s stated primary objectives? 5. What are the major barriers to collaboration between your organisation and a global governance institution from a different sector, towards the advancement of global health? 6. What are the major enablers to collaboration between your organisation and a global governance institution from a different sector, towards the advancement of global health? Given the major barriers and enablers, and the conceptual and procedural contexts discussed, are there any proposals or solutions you would like to see?

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