1st Edition
Justice in Global Health New Perspectives and Current Issues
Rather than making another attempt at proposing a single and unifying theory of global health justice, this timely collection brings together, instead, scholars from a range of traditions to frame the issue more broadly, highlighting not only different perspectives but also key topics and debates.
The volume features chapters that offer both new theoretical approaches to global health justice, as well as fresh takes on existing frameworks. Others adopt a bottom-up approach to tackle specific problems, including the sexual rights of children and adolescents, artificial intelligence (AI) in medicine, framing of neglected tropical diseases, securitization of health, and trademarks in global health. Brought together within one volume, the breadth of these chapters provides a unique and enlightening contribution to the wider Global Health field.
This important volume will be a fascinating read for students and researchers across Global Health, Bioethics, Political Philosophy, and Global Development.
Introduction: Justice in Global Health
Himani Bhakuni and Lucas Miotto
Part I. Citizenship, Power, and Relational Justice
Chapter 1. World Citizenship and Global Health
Xuanpu Zhuang
Chapter 2. AI-DSS in Healthcare and Their Power over Health Insecure Collectives
Nils Freyer and Hendrik Kempt
Part II. Responsibility for Justice: Law, Civil Society, and the Private Sector
Chapter 3. Everything is unconstitutional: contesting structural violence in health systems with legal mobilisation
Luciano Bottini Filho
Chapter 4 Framing Noma: Human Rights and Neglected Tropical Diseases as Paths for Advocacy
Alice Trotter and Ioana Cismas
Chapter 5. Trade Marks and the Right to Health: A Growing Tension
Alvaro Fernandez-Mora
Part III. Sexual Rights and Reproductive Justice
Chapter 6. The Capability Approach and the Sexual Rights of Children and Adolescents
Gottfried Schweiger
Chapter 7. Reproductive Justice and Ethics of Consent in Assisted Living for Disabled People: A Critical Reflection for Socio-Legal Policies in India
Keerty Nakray
Part IV. Health Governance, Security, and Transitions
Chapter 8. Justice in Global Health Governance: The Role of Enforcement
Daniel Weissglass
Chapter 9. The Ethical Issues Raised by the Securitization of Health
Ryoa Chung and Joanne Liu
Chapter 10. Transitional Health Justice
Himani Bhakuni and Lucas Miotto
Part V. Global Health Justice: New Frames, New Approaches
Chapter 11. Redistribution and Recognition in the Pursuit of Health Justice: An Application of Nancy Fraser’s Framework
Erika Blacksher
Chapter 12. Beyond Egalitarianism: A Confucian Approach to Justice in Global Health Justice
Man-to Tang
Chapter 13. What do we want from a theory of global health justice?
Sridhar Venkatapuram
Biography
Himani Bhakuni is a Lecturer at York Law School, United Kingdom. Before that, she was the Assistant Professor of Justice in Global Health Research at University Medical Center, Utrecht University. She primarily works on issues within global health and human rights, particularly on questions surrounding justice, reparations, and global health law.
Lucas Miotto is a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Surrey and a core member of the Surrey Centre for Law and Philosophy. He works at the intersection between legal, moral, and political philosophy, dealing with questions about coercion, manipulation, wrongful interference, and forms of just governance.