Abstract

Global health research is essentially a normative undertaking: we use it to propose policies that ought to be implemented. To arrive at a normative conclusion in a logical way requires at least one normative premise, one that cannot be derived from empirical evidence alone. But there is no widely accepted normative premise for global health, and the actors with the power to set policies may use a different normative premise than the scholars that propose policies - which may explain the 'implementation gap' in global health. If global health scholars shy away from the normative debate - because it requires normative premises that cannot be derived from empirical evidence alone - they not only mislead each other, they also prevent and stymie debate on the role of the powerhouses of global health, their normative premises, and the rights and wrongs of these premises. The humanities and social sciences are better equipped - and less reluctant - to approach the normative debate in a scientifically valid manner, and ought to be better integrated in the interdisciplinary research that global health research is, or should be.

Highlights

  • Several papers exploring the role of politics and power in global health have been published in this young journal recently[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]; which suggests that a new journal may have been needed to allow for this important discussion

  • This debate is vital for global health science – and I mean vital: I do not think the academic arm of global health can ‘survive’ in any meaningful way without addressing the role of norms, politics and power in global health head on

  • As I will explain further below, it is not possible to discuss the politics of global health without discussing the normative premises behind the politics, and normative premises cannot be logically derived from empirical evidence alone

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Summary

Introduction

Several papers exploring the role of politics and power in global health have been published in this young journal recently[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]; which suggests that a new journal may have been needed to allow for this important discussion. As I will explain further below, it is not possible to discuss the politics of global health without discussing the normative premises behind the politics, and normative premises cannot be logically derived from empirical evidence alone.

Results
Conclusion
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