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Health Promotion International 2006 21(Supplement 1):51-58; doi:10.1093/heapro/dal051
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© The Author (2007). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org


GLOBALIZATION FOR HEALTH

Health as foreign policy: harnessing globalization for health

David P. Fidler

School of Law, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA

Address for correspondence: David P. Fidler, Indiana University School of Law, 211 S. Indiana Avenue Bloomington IN 47405, USA. E-mail: dfidler{at}indiana.edu


   Abstract

This paper explores the importance for health promotion of the rise of public health as a foreign policy issue. Although health promotion encompassed foreign policy as part of ‘healthy public policy’, mainstream foreign policy neglected public health and health promotion's role in it. Globalization forces health promotion, however, to address directly the relationship between public health and foreign policy. The need for ‘health as foreign policy’ is apparent from the prominence public health now has in all the basic governance functions served by foreign policy. The Secretary-General's United Nations (UN) reform proposals demonstrate the importance of foreign policy to health promotion as a core component of public health because the proposals embed public health in each element of the Secretary-General's vision for the UN in the 21st century. The emergence of health as foreign policy presents opportunities and risks for health promotion that can be managed by emphasizing that public health constitutes an integrated public good that benefits all governance tasks served by foreign policy. Any effort to harness globalization for public health will have to make health as foreign policy a centerpiece of its ambitions, and this task is now health promotion's burden and opportunity.

Key words: global public goods; global governance; foreign policy; United Nations reform


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