Search results for ""Author Lawrence O. Gostin""
Harvard University Press Global Health Security
Book SynopsisIn an age of pandemics, no country can achieve public health on its own. Health security expert Lawrence O. Gostin examines the key cross-border threats to our well-being, from infectious diseases to bioterrorism, and proposes pragmatic solutions: targeted research, robust international institutions, and tools for effective global action.Trade ReviewGostin draws on the lessons of AIDS, SARS, Ebola, and the COVID-19 pandemic to lay out a roadmap for global health security, making a powerful and persuasive case for how the principles of solidarity, equity, and justice must guide the international community in preparing for and responding to the health crises of the future. -- Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health OrganizationGlobal Health Security is invaluable, drawing critical lessons from the world’s epic struggle with COVID-19, and looking far beyond. Gostin incisively analyses future threats, from superbugs and antimicrobial resistance to bioterrorism, and charts a better course through global solidarity and enlightened self-interest. If you read only one book on global health this year, make it this one. -- Sir Jeremy Farrar, Director of WellcomeThe world has learned valuable lessons from infectious disease outbreaks. Yet the power of lessons is in their use. In this book, Gostin provides a sweeping view of what is needed to avert disaster in the future. The crucial question is: will people read and act on his suggestions? -- William Herbert Foege, 10th Director of the Centers for Disease Control and PreventionWe are entering an age of pandemics, one marked with more frequent disease outbreaks and increasingly greater threats to our social order. There is no one better than Gostin to connect the dots across outbreaks, laying out how climate change, economic development, and globalization have created new risks. But more than sounding the alarm, he brilliantly charts a path forward for how nations and indeed the world can be better prepared to meet these threats head on. -- Ashish K. Jha, Dean of the Brown University School of Public HealthAs a leading public health legal scholar and global health activist, Gostin has influenced the course of every major public health crisis of our time, from HIV/AIDS, to SARS, Ebola, and now COVID-19. Global Health Security draws on those important experiences but looks forward, charting a clear and compelling framework to assess future biological threats and effectively address them. Masterfully insightful. -- Peggy Hamburg, former Foreign Secretary of the National Academy of MedicineDiscouraged but inspired by COVID‑19, [Gostin’s] wide-ranging study analyzes the science and politics of past and present global disease, with hypothetical exercises about a new influenza, bioterrorism, and cholera. He recommends steps to reduce pandemic risk, such as increasing surveillance of animal pathogens and their movement. Above all, he calls for a ‘new politics,’ free from nationalistic populism. -- Andrew Robinson * Nature *[A] comprehensive and detailed blueprint for responding to global health crises. Gostin casts a wide net, addressing the overuse of antibiotics, climate change, and the lack of universal health coverage…Gostin goes further to explain how lessons from Covid-19 can remake society to be better prepared for future health threats. * Publishers Weekly *A comprehensive blueprint for global reforms. * Georgetown Law *
£33.11
Indiana University Press Surrogate Motherhood Politics and Privacy
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction: Larry GostinCivil LibertiesA Civil Liberties Analysis of Surrogacy ArrangementsLarry GostinProcreative Liberty and the State's Burden of Proff in Regulating Noncoital ReproductionJohn A. RobertsonFairy Tales Surrogate Mothers TellGeorge J. AnnasLegal StatusChoosing Family Law over Contract Law as a Paradigm for Surrogate MotherhoodAlexander M. Capron and Margaret J. RadinSurrogate Motherhood and the Best Interests of ChildrenAngela R. HolderLegislative Approaches to Surrogate MotherhoodR. Alto CharoEthicsSurrogate Motherhood as Prenatal AdoptionBonnie SteinbockIs There Anything Wrong with Surrogate Motherhood? An Ethical AnalysisRuth MacklinThe Ethics of Surrogate Motherhood: Biology, Freedom, and Moral ObligationLisa Sowle CahillWomen's AutonomySurrogate Motherhood: The Challenge for FeministsLori B. AndrewsAn Essay on Surrogacy and Feminist ThoughtJoan MahoneyPublic HealthSurrogacy and the Health Care Professional: Baby M and BeyondKaren H. RothenbergSurrogacy: A Preferred Treatment for Infertility?Nadine TaubCase Review Essays: The New Jersey Supreme Court Baby M DecisionThe Case of Baby M: Love's Labor LostGeorge P. Smith, IISolomon Would Weep: A Comment on In the Matter of Baby M and the Limits of Judicial AuthorityRandall P. BezansonAppendixesAppendix IExcerpts from the Decision of the New Jersey Supreme Court, In the Case of Baby MAppendix IIStatus of State Legislation Proposed or Enacted through October 5, 1988Appendix IIIModel Surrogacy ActsA. Section of Family Law of the American Bar AssociationB. National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State LawsAppendix IVStatements of Policy on SurrogacyA. The American Civil Liberties UnionB. The American College of Obstetricians and GynecologistsC. The American Medical AssociationD. The American Fertility SocietyE. The New York State Task Force on Life and the LawF. Institute on Women and TechnologyG. Testimony of Gena CoreaAppendix VBibliographyContributorsIndex
£18.99
Harvard University Press Global Health Law
Book SynopsisDespite global progress, staggering health inequalities between rich and poor raise basic questions of social justice. Defining the field of global health law, Lawrence Gostin drives home the need for effective governance and offers a blueprint for reform, based on the principle that the opportunity to live a healthy life is a basic human right.Trade ReviewGlobal Health Law brings attention to critical aspects of law that anyone interested in global health needs to be concerned about: the major sources of law, and the institutions relevant to implementing them…Gostin posits that the solution to major global health challenges lies in transforming global health law and global governance because of their potential to dramatically improve health and reduce inequalities. -- Sofia Gruskin * The Lancet *Gostin here presents a persuasive and inspiring call to action for lawyers and legal scholars to harness their talents to the fundamental goal of health for all by utilizing human rights standards, international treaties and activist litigation…Global Health Law makes a compelling case that the law’s time in the march towards global health is nigh. -- Juliet S. Sorensen * Times Higher Education *Gostin continues in his distinctive personal tradition of embodying both scholar and activist. In this regard, he advances a powerfully advocated thesis that stimulates many philosophical and political ideas. While some may wish to challenge aspects of his political conclusions, he has thrown down a gauntlet to anyone who would wish to side-line the imperatives that he identifies in relation to our responsibility effectively to achieve good global governance for health and improve life the world over. -- John Coggon * Medical Law Review *Larry Gostin’s Global Health Law is more than the definitive book on a dynamic field. Gostin harnesses the power of international law and human rights as tools to close unconscionable health inequities—the injustices that burden marginalized populations throughout the world. Gostin presents a forceful vision, one that deserves a wide embrace. -- Paul FarmerThe fight against apartheid in South Africa inspired a Constitution that guarantees everyone the right to health. Lawrence Gostin’s groundbreaking Global Health Law replicates that struggle globally, employing wider principles of social justice and international law. His book is rich in scholarship, and inspiring in its generous-spirited reach. -- Justice Edwin Cameron, Constitutional Court of South AfricaThe fusion of human rights and social movements is a powerful theme running throughout Lawrence Gostin’s absorbing book. Global Health Law shines a light on the inspiration of the AIDS movement, bringing the ingenuity of civil society to achieve health justice for all. -- Michele Sidibé, Executive Director of UNAIDS
£46.36
Oxford University Press Human Rights in Global Health
Book SynopsisInstitutions matter for the advancement of human rights in global health. Given the dramatic development of human rights under international law and the parallel proliferation of global institutions for public health, there arises an imperative to understand the implementation of human rights through global health governance. This volume examines the evolving relationship between human rights, global governance, and public health, studying an expansive set of health challenges through a multi-sectoral array of global organizations. To analyze the structural determinants of rights-based governance, the organizations in this volume include those international bureaucracies that implement human rights in ways that influence public health in a globalizing world. This volume brings together leading health and human rights scholars and practitioners from academia, non-governmental organizations, and the United Nations system. They explore the foundations of human rights as a normative framewTrade ReviewHaving planted the seeds of the human rights-based approach in my role as United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, I am delighted to see these contributing chapters sharing the enduring results of these efforts to advance global health. This volume will be vital to the continuing advancement of rights-based global governance to safeguard the health of the world's most vulnerable peoples. It makes clear the importance of translating human rights into institutional programming for public health. Providing the first systematic account of the implementation of health-related human rights through global governance, this volume will serve as a model for future research, practice, and advocacy to advance global health and human rights. * Mary Robinson, Former President of Ireland (1990-1997); United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997-2002) *Table of ContentsFOREWORD Human Rights in Global Health Governance Mary Robinson PREFACE Preface INTRODUCTION Responding to the Public Health Harms of a Globalizing World through Human Rights in Global Governance Benjamin Mason Meier and Lawrence O. Gostin PART I: HUMAN RIGHTS IN GLOBAL HEALTH 1. The Origins of Human Rights in Global Health Lawrence O. Gostin and Benjamin Mason Meier 2. The Evolution of Applying Human Rights Frameworks to Health Alicia Ely Yamin and Andrés Constantin 3. Framing Human Rights in Global Health Governance Benjamin Mason Meier and Lawrence O. Gostin 4. The Future of Global Governance for Health: Putting Rights at the Center of Sustainable Development Michel Sidibé, Helena Nygren-Krug, Bronwyn McBride, and Kent Buse PART II: WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION 5. Development of Human Rights Through WHO Benjamin Mason Meier and Florian Kastler 6. Mainstreaming Human Rights Across WHO Rebekah Thomas and Veronica Magar 7. The Future of Human Rights in WHO Flavia Bustreo, Veronica Magar, Rajat Khosla, Marcus Stahlhofer, and Rebekah Thomas PART III: INTER-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS 8. The United Nations Children's Fund: Implementing Human Rights for Child Health Benjamin Mason Meier, Mitra Motlagh, and Kumanan Rasanathan 9. The International Labor Organization: Human Rights to Health and Safety at Work Lee Swepston 10. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization: Advancing Global Health Through Human Rights in Education and Science Audrey Chapman and Konstantinos Tararas 11. The United Nations Population Fund: An Evolving Human Rights Mission and Approach to Sexual and Reproductive Health Emilie Filmer-Wilson and Luis Mora 12. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations: Advancing the Right to Food to Promote Public Health Olivier de Schutter and Carolin Anthes 13. The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS: With Communities for Human Rights Helena Nygren-Krug 14. The Future of Intergovernmental Partnerships for Health and Human Rights Sarah Hawkes, Julia Kreienkamp, and Kent Buse PART IV: GLOBAL ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE & GLOBAL HEALTH FUNDING AGENCIES 15. Integrating a Human Rights-Based Approach and the Right to Development into Global Governance for Health Stephen P. Marks 16. The World Bank: Contested Institutional Progress in Rights-Based Health Discourse Yusra Ribhi Shawar and Jennifer Prah Ruger 17. The World Trade Organization: Carving Out the Right to Health for Access to Medicines and Tobacco Control Suerie Moon and Thirukumaran Balasubramaniam 18. National Foreign Assistance Programs: Advancing Health-Related Human Rights Through Shared Obligations for Global Health Rachel Hammonds and Gorik Ooms 19. The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria: Funding Basic Services and Meeting the Challenge of Rights-Based Programs Ralf Jürgens, Joanne Csete, Hyeyoung Lim, Susan Timberlake, and Matthew Smith 20. The Future of Multilateral Funding to Realize the Right to Health Gorik Ooms and Rachel Hammonds PART V: GLOBAL HEALTH IN HUMAN RIGHTS GOVERNANCE 21. The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights: Putting the Right to Health on the Agenda Gillian MacNaughton and Mariah McGill 22. United National Special Procedures: Peopling Human Rights, Peopling Global Health Thérèse Murphy and Amrei Mueller 23. Human Rights Treaty Bodies: Monitoring, Interpreting, and Adjudicating Health-Related Human Rights Benjamin Mason Meier and Virginia Brás Gomes 24. The Future of Human Rights Accountability for Global Health under the Universal Periodic Review Judith R. Bueno de Mesquita and Dabney P. Evans PART VI: CONCLUSION AND AFTERWORD CONCLUSION 25. Comparative Analysis on Human Rights in Global Governance for Health Benjamin Mason Meier and Lawrence O. Gostin AFTERWORD Governance for Global Health and Human Rights in a Populist Age Benjamin Mason Meier Index
£53.20
University of California Press Public Health Law and Ethics
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsPART ONE. CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS OF PUBLIC HEALTH LAW AND ETHICS 1. Law and the Public’s Health: Mapping the Terrain 2. Public Health Ethics: Science, Values, and the Regulation of Risk PART TWO. LEGAL FOUNDATIONS OF PUBLIC HEALTH 3. Public Health Powers and Duties 4. Public Health and the Protection of Individual Rights: Due Process, Equal Protection, and the First Amendment 5. Public Health Governance: Administrative Agencies and Local Governments PART THREE. MODES OF LEGAL INTERVENTION 6. Direct Regulation for the Public’s Health and Safety 7. Tort Liability as Indirect Regulation 8. Taxation, Spending, and the Social Safety Net PART FOUR. PUBLIC HEALTH LAW IN CONTEXT 9. Surveillance and Public Health Research: Privacy, Security, and Confidentiality of Personal Health Information 10. Infectious Disease Prevention and Control 11. Public Health Emergency Preparedness and Response 12. Noncommunicable Disease Prevention 13. Injury and Violence Prevention 14. Health Justice About the Authors Index
£44.00
University of California Press Public Health Law Power Duty Restraint 3e
Book SynopsisAnalyzes major health threats of our time such as chronic diseases, emerging infectious diseases, antimicrobial resistance, bioterrorism, natural disasters, opiod overdose, and gun violence. This title draws on constitutional law, local government law, and tort law to develop their conception of law as a tool for protecting the public's health.Table of ContentsList of Illustrations List of Tables List of Boxes Foreword by Daniel M. Fox, Samuel L. Milbank, and Carmen Hooker Odom Preface to the Second Edition Acknowledgments PART ONE: Conceptual Foundations of Public Health Law 1. A Theory and Definition of Public Health Law Public Health Law: A Definition and Core Values Public Health Statutes: Legal Foundations of Public Health Agencies Law as a Tool for the Public's Health: Models of Legal Intervention The Legitimate Scope of Public Health and the Law 2. Public Health Regulation: A Systematic Evaluation General Justifications for Public Health Regulation Step 1: Is the Risk Significant? Risk Assessments Step 2: Is the Regulation Effective? The "Means/Ends" Test Step 3: Is the Regulation Cost-Effective? Step 4: Is the Regulation the Least Restrictive Alternative? Personal Burdens Step 5: Is the Regulation Fair? Just Distribution of Benefits, Burdens, and Costs "Transparency": A Principle of Good Public Health Governance The "Precautionary Principle": Acting under Conditions of Scientific Uncertainty PART TWO: Law and the Public's Health 3. Public Health Law in the Constitutional Design: Public Health Powers and Duties Constitutional Functions and Their Application to Public Health The Negative Constitution: The Absence of Government's Duty to Protect Health and Safety State and Local Power to Ensure the Conditions for the Public's Health: Salus Populi Est Suprema Lex Federal Power to Safeguard the Public's Health New Federalism and the Public's Health 4. Constitutional Limits on the Exercise of Public Health Powers: Safeguarding Individual Rights and Freedoms Public Health and the Bill of Rights: The Incorporation Doctrine Jacobson v. Massachusetts: Police Power and Civil Liberties in Tension The Enduring Meaning of Jacobson Public Health Powers in the Modern Constitutional Era 5. Public Health Governance: Direct Regulation for the Public's Health and Safety A Brief History of Public Health Regulation Public Health Agencies and the Rise of the Administrative State Administrative Law: Powers and Limits of Executive Agencies New Governance: Theory and Practice 6. Tort Law and the Public's Health: Indirect Regulation Major Theories of Tort Liability Scientific Conundrums in Mass Tort Litigation: Epidemiology in the Courtroom The Public Health Value of Tort Litigation "The Tobacco Wars": A Case Study Tort Litigation to Prevent Firearm Injuries: A Case Study The Limitations of Tort Law: Social and Economic Costs 7. Global Health Law: Health in a Global Community Globalization and the Spread of Infectious Disease, Man-Made and Controllable The Epidemiologic Transition from Infectious to Noncommunicable Diseases: A Double Burden in Resource-Poor Countries International Health Regulations: A Historic Development in Global Governance Framework Convention on Tobacco Control: Global Strategies to Reduce Smoking World Trade and World Health Human Rights: Advancing Dignity, Justice, and Security in Health PART THREE: Public Health and Civil Liberties in Conflict 8. Surveillance and Public Health Research: Personal Privacy and the "Right to Know" Public Health Surveillance Mandatory Reporting of Diseases and Other Health Conditions Physician and Community Resistance to Notification Laws: Case Studies on HIV and Diabetes Surveillance Partner Notification: Contact Tracing, Duty to Warn, and Right to Know Public Health Research Privacy, Confidentiality, and Security: Defining Concepts Health Information Privacy: Ethical Underpinnings Health Information Privacy: Legal Status Toward a Model Public Health Information Privacy Law 9. Health, Communication, and Behavior: Freedom of Expression Two Antithetical Theories of Health Communication Government Speech: Public Health Communications When Government Speaks: A Constitutional Perspective Commercial Speech Compelled Commercial Speech: Health and Safety Disclosure Requirements Food Marketing to Children: A Case Study 10. Medical Countermeasures for Epidemic Disease: Bodily Integrity Compulsory Vaccination: Immunizing the Population against Disease Testing and Screening A Case Study on HIV Screening: Public Health and Civil Liberties in Conflict? Compulsory Physical Examination and Medical Treatment 11. Public Health Strategies for Epidemic Disease: Association, Travel, and Liberty A Brief History of the Ancient Power of Quarantine Isolation and Quarantine: Law, Ethics, and Public Policy Community Containment Strategies Pandemic Influenza: A Case Study on Medical Countermeasures and Public Health Interventions 12. Economic Liberty and the Pursuit of Public Health The Regulatory Tools of Public Health Agencies Economic Liberty: Contracts, Property Uses, and "Takings" The Normative Value of Economic Liberty PART FOUR: The Future of the Public's Health 13. Concluding Reflections on the Field Public Health, Politics, and Money Leadership and Jurisdiction Legitimacy and Trust Powers and Limits in Public Health: A Case Study on Obesity and Chronic Disease The Future of Public Health Law Notes Selected Bibliography Table of Cases Index About the Author
£46.75
Oxford University Press Inc Global Health Law Policy
Book SynopsisGlobalization has unleashed the spread of communicable and non-communicable diseases, connected societies through vulnerability to common threats, and revealed the limitations of domestic legislation in addressing economic, social, and political determinants of health. Yet if globalization has presented challenges to disease prevention and health promotion, with the COVID-19 pandemic making clear the governance challenges ahead, global health law offers the promise of bridging national boundaries to alleviate global inequities.The academic field of global health law analyzes the law and policy frameworks that apply to the new public health threats, non-state actors, and regulatory instruments that structure global health. Arising out of international health law--which narrowly focuses on relationships among states--the field of global health law reflects the changing institutional architecture, norms, and diplomacy necessary to respond to the health threats of the twenty-first century.Table of ContentsForeword: The Law as a Fundamental Determinant of Global Health by Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Preface: A Field Born of Trying Times List of Contributors Introduction: Foundations of Global Health Law & Policy by Lawrence O. Gostin and Benjamin Mason Meier I. FRAMEWORKS & INSTITUTIONS OF GLOBAL HEALTH: SHIFTING ACTORS & NORMS IN A GLOBALIZING WORLD 1. Global Health: Global Determinants, Global Governance, and Global Law by Lawrence O. Gostin and Alexandra Finch 2. Global Health Law: Legal Frameworks to Advance Global Health by Sharifah Sekalala and Roojin Habibi 3. Global Health Landscape: The Proliferating Actors Influencing Global Health Governance by Benjamin Mason Meier and Matiangai Sirleaf 4. Global Health Norms: Human Rights, Equity, and Social Justice in Global Health by Judith Bueno de Mesquita and Lisa Forman 5. Global Health Diplomacy: The Process of Developing Global Health Law and Policy by Gian Luca Burci and Björn Kümmel II. GLOBAL HEALTH GOVERNANCE FOR DISEASE PREVENTION & HEALTH PROMOTION 6. Infectious Disease: Preventing, Detecting, and Responding to Pandemic Threats under International Law by Pedro A. Villarreal and Lauren Tonti 7. Non- Communicable Disease: Regulating Commercial Determinants Underlying Health by Roger Magnusson and Lawrence O. Gostin 8. Mental Health: From Institutions to Community Inclusion by Priscila Rodríguez and Eric Rosenthal 9. Environmental Health: Regulating Clean Air and Water as Underlying Determinants of Health by Marlies Hesselman and Benjamin Mason Meier III. ECONOMIC INSTITUTIONS, CORPORATE REGULATION, & GLOBAL HEALTH FUNDING 10. Sustainable Development: The 2030 Agenda and Its Implications for Global Health Law by Stéphanie Dagron and Jennifer Hasselgård- Rowe 11. Economic Development Policy: Poverty Alleviation for Public Health Advancement by Diane A. Desierto and Erica Patterson 12. International Trade Governance: Free Trade and Intellectual Property Threaten Public Health by Lisa Forman, Katrina Perehudoff, and Chuan- Feng Wu 13. Commercial Determinants of Health: Corporate Social Responsibility as Smokescreen or Global Health Policy? by Roojin Habibi and Thana C. de Campos- Rudinsky 14. Global Health Funding Agencies: Developing New Institutions to Finance Health Needs by Sam Halabi and Lawrence O. Gostin IV. INTERNATIONAL LEGAL EFFORTS TO ADDRESS RISING HEALTH THREATS 15. Antimicrobial Resistance: Collective Action to Support Shared Global Resources by Isaac Weldon and Steven J. Hoffman 16. Pathogen Sharing: Balancing Access to Pathogen Samples with Equitable Access to Medicines by Mark Eccleston- Turner and Michelle Rourke 17. Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights: Advancing Human Rights to Protect Bodily Autonomy and Sexuality by Aziza Ahmed and Terry McGovern 18. Health in Conflict: International Humanitarian Law as Global Health Policy by Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum and Benjamin Mason Meier 19. Climate Change: A Cataclysmic Health Threat Requiring Global Action by Alexandra Phelan and Kim van Daalen 20. Universal Health Coverage: Whole of Government Approaches to Determinants of Health by Lawrence O. Gostin and Benjamin Mason Meier Afterword: Foundational Information for a New Generation by Steven Solomon Index
£86.45
Oxford University Press Inc Foundations of Global Health Human Rights
Book SynopsisHuman rights are essential to global health, yet rising threats in an increasingly divided world are challenging the progressive evolution of health-related human rights. It is necessary to empower a new generation of scholars, advocates, and practitioners to sustain the global commitment to universal rights in public health. Looking to the next generation to face the struggles ahead, this book provides a detailed understanding of the evolving relationship between global health and human rights, laying a human rights foundation for the advancement of transformative health policies, programs, and practices.International human rights law has been repeatedly shown to advance health and wellbeing - empowering communities and fostering accountability for realizing the highest attainable standard of health. This book provides a compelling examination of international human rights as essential for advancing public health. It demonstrates how human rights strengthens human autonomy and dignity, while placing clear responsibilities on government to safeguard the public''s health and safety. Bringing together leading academics in the field of health and human rights, this volume: (1) explains the norms and principles that define the field, (2) examines the methods and tools for implementing human rights to promote health, (3) applies essential human rights to leading public health threats, and (4) analyzes rising human rights challenges in a rapidly globalizing world. This foundational text shows why interdisciplinary scholarship and action are essential for health-related human rights, placing human rights at the center of public health and securing a future of global health with justice.Trade ReviewThis book is an essential overview for students of health and human rights, who can quickly acquire a flavor of the field and understanding of essential tools and dilemmas. * Patty Skuster, Human Rights Review *This edited book pioneers the interdisciplinary field of international human rights law and global health governance. It argues that global governance regimes have created and built a legal framework where health-related rights are explicit, protected and are advocated for by individuals and communities across the world. * Sabine I. Franklin, University of Westminster, Medicine, Conflict and Survival *Table of ContentsForeword: Human Rights are Central to Global HealthDr. Tedros Adhanom GhebreyesusIntroduction: Global Health & Human RightsLawrence O. Gostin & Benjamin Mason MeierI. The Human Rights Movement: International Norms and PrinciplesChapter 1. The Birth and Development of Human Rights for HealthBenjamin Mason Meier, Thérèse Murphy & Lawrence O. GostinChapter 2. Global Health Law: Legal Foundations for Social Justice in Public HealthLawrence O. Gostin, Matiangai V. S. Sirleaf & Eric A. FriedmanChapter 3. The Right to Health and Health-Related Human RightsJohn Tobin & Damon BarrettChapter 4. The Rights-Based Approach to HealthFlavia Bustreo & Curtis F.J. DoebblerII. Bringing Rights Home: Tools for Human Rights Implementation and AccountabilityChapter 5. Translating International Law into Domestic Law, Policy, and PracticeGillian MacNaughton & Angela DugerChapter 6. Human Rights Advocacy in Global HealthJoseph J. Amon & Eric A. FriedmanChapter 7. Monitoring and Review to Assess Human Rights ImplementationBenjamin Mason Meier, Hanna Huffstetler & Judith Bueno de MesquitaChapter 8. Justiciability of Human Rights for HealthColleen M. Flood & Bryan ThomasChapter 9. Advancing Human Rights through Global Health GovernanceBenjamin Mason Meier, Margherita Marianna Cinà & Lawrence O. GostinIII. Contemporary Applications: Healthy People, Healthy PopulationsChapter 10. Communicable Diseases, Health Security, and Human Rights: From AIDS to EbolaSharifah Sekalala & John HarringtonChapter 11. Human Rights and Non-Communicable Diseases: Controlling Tobacco and Promoting Healthy DietsBrigit Toebes & David PattersonChapter 12. The Emergence of "New" Health- Related Human Rights: Recognizing the Human Rights to Water and SanitationBenjamin Mason Meier & Inga T. WinklerChapter 13. Chronic Illness: Disability and Mental HealthOliver Lewis & Soumitra PathareChapter 14. Equity in Health: Sexual and Reproductive Health and RightsTerry McGovern & Aziza AhmedIV. New Challenges: Human Rights to Advance Public Health in a Globalizing EraChapter 15. Health and Human Rights through Global Development: The Right to Development, Rights-Based Approach to Development, and Sustainable Development GoalsStephen P. Marks & Alice HanChapter 16. International Trade, Public Health, and Human RightsChuang-Feng Wu & Chien-Huei WuChapter 17. Health & Human Rights in Conflict and EmergenciesDabney P. Evans, Edward L. Queen & Lara S. MartinChapter 18. Human Subjects in Globalized Health ResearchAndrés Constantin & Roberto AndornoChapter 19. The Environment, a Changing Climate, and Planetary HealthAlexandra PhelanChapter 20. Global Health & Human Rights in the Age of PopulismLawrence O. Gostin, Andrés Constantin & Benjamin Mason MeierConclusion
£85.42