Global Health Watch - Global
- re-connecting global civil society with the institutions of global health governance
- promoting human rights as the basis for health policy, as a corrective to the market-led policy agenda (which organisers say tends to fragment and exclude)
- placing health and health inequities within a broader political economy perspective
- placing health and health inequities within a multi-sectoral perspective. The Watch will explicitly link health to other sectors such as the environment, international finance, agriculture and food security, war, housing, land rights, conflict, and education
- linking research and analysis to advocacy. The Watch will provide recommendations and encourage advocacy actions
Second, in addition to these chapters, the report will feature a section that includes testimonies from organisations and individuals from around the world. Project organisers collected stories and experiences around the following topics:
- The effects of privatisation and commercialisation on access to health care and the quality of health care in the developing world; and ways in which advocacy has improved access to health services in the developingworld.
- The effect of privatisation on access to water and sanitation services in the developing world.
- The Watch is made freely available on the web (click here for access); organisers will subsidise the publication of the hard copy version in poorer countries at a cheaper price. In addition, the main messages of the Watch will be promoted in diverse media.
- Shortened versions of the report in languages other than English will be produced for dissemination to grassroots organisations and other civil society groups.
- Civil society groupings will be encouraged, and possibly coordinated, to encourage individuals to take the Watch to their national decision-makers. An underlying strategy will be to seek formal and explicit endorsement of the report or specific chapters from as many individuals and NGOs as possible so that there will be a broad sense of ownership of the report.
- Meetings will be called with heads of the global health institutions such as the World Health Organization (WHO), and they will be asked to respond publicly to the issues presented in the Watch. These meetings will be part of a broader campaign around a number of cross-cutting recommendations related to the publication's key themes.
The Watch consists of approximately 100,000 words, but is envisioned that the precise scope and size of the report will change slightly as it is re-published on a regular basis.
The People's Health Movement, the Global Equity Gauge Alliance, and Medact.
Letters sent from Patricia Morton to The Communication Initiative on November 27 2003, December 4 2003, and August 26 2004; and Global Health Watch description document; and posting to the e-mail list for the Human Right to Health Group of the International Network for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ESCR-Net) dated August 1 2005 - click here for the archives.
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