| Literature DB >> 23829176 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Foreign policy holds great potential to improve the health of a global citizenship. Our contemporary political order is, in part, characterized by sovereign states acting either in opposition or cooperation with other sovereign states. This order is also characterized by transnational efforts to address transnational issues such as those featured so prominently in the area of global health, such as the spread of infectious disease, health worker migration and the movement of health-harming products. These two features of the current order understandably create tension for truly global initiatives. DISCUSSION: National security has become the dominant ethical frame underlying the health-based foreign policy of many states, despite the transnational nature of many contemporary health challenges. This ethical approach engages global health as a means to achieving national security objectives. Implicit in this ethical frame is the version of humanity that dichotomizes between "us" and "them". What has been left out of this discourse, for the most part, is the role that foreign policy can play in extending the responsibility of states to protect and promote health of the other, for the sake of the other.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23829176 PMCID: PMC3717113 DOI: 10.1186/1472-698X-13-29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Int Health Hum Rights ISSN: 1472-698X
A typology of ethical perspectives
| Extreme self-interest | |
| Self-otherness (Very high) | |
| State-centered | |
| Self-otherness (High) | |
| Reactive | |
| Aide-oriented support | |
| State-centered | |
| Self-otherness (High) | |
| Reactive | |
| Long-term support/development | |
| Aide-oriented support | |
| State-centered | |
| Self-otherness (Low) | |
| Long-term support | |
| Systems development | |
| Person-centered |
Caney’s four points about the importance of the state within a cosmopolitan ethical frame
| • They can pursue cosmopolitan policies (e.g. debt relief) | |
| • They can construct cosmopolitan institutions (e.g. World Health Organization) | |
| • Institutional arrangements to uphold persons rights within and outside of state borders | |
| • A national identity can rally support for state policies that uphold cosmopolitan ethics | |
| • Provide compensation for global injustice (e.g. compensation for state enacted injustices such as colonization – Britain may provide compensation to Indian citizens for injustices enacted during colonial rule) |