| Literature DB >> 26635496 |
Ana B Amaya1, Vincent Rollet2, Stephen Kingah1.
Abstract
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the European Union, the Southern African Development Community and the Union of South American Nations have increasingly been involved in health diplomacy in the past decade, yet little is known about how they frame health as a foreign policy issue and how this has an impact on their prioritisation of policies. For this, we conducted a review of existing grey and peer-reviewed literature that address regional integration and health, as well as a documentary review according to security, development, trade, human rights, moral/ethical reasonings and global public goods frames identified in the literature. The policy frames identified responded to the challenges these regions currently face. The Association of Southeast Asian Nation's struggle with re-emerging diseases has led to favouring a securitisation approach to health, the European Union approaches health as a cross-cutting policy issue, the Southern African Development Community presents health as a driver for development, and while the Union of South American Nations emphasises health as a human right and addresses the social determinants of health as an ethical imperative. Overall, these policy frames were useful in analysing the framing of health in foreign policy at the regional level. However, within our analysis, we identified a new frame that approaches health as an intersectoral issue. The impact of regional organisations' forward will depend on their ability to harness their convening power and speak in a coherent voice on health matters.Entities:
Keywords: Foreign policy; health policy; policy frames; regional organisations
Year: 2015 PMID: 26635496 PMCID: PMC4639831 DOI: 10.1177/1468018115599816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Soc Policy ISSN: 1468-0181
Conceptualisation of health and foreign policy frames.
| Policy frame | Conceptualisation | Arguments from | Examples of key words |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Security | ‘Health framed as a traditional security issue emphasises the
defence of borders against infectious diseases and bioweapons
with little consideration for non-communicable diseases and
social determinants of health’ ( | Security; securitisation; conflict; defence; stability; political; pandemics; protection. | |
| 2. Development | ‘Health is key to development and combating poverty. Hunger is a
major cause of ill health. Structural causes of poverty and
hunger are interwoven, and part of a nexus of policies where
foreign policies also play an important part’. ( | Development; human development; poverty; economy; neglected population; equity; aid; support. | |
| 3. Global public goods | ‘The framing of health as “commons” or as a “global public good”
conceives of health as something beyond the jurisdiction of any
one country and of interest to two or more countries or their
populations. Public goods are non-excludable and non-rival
–people cannot be excluded from consuming such goods, nor does
one person’s consumption of such goods preclude consumption by
another’. ( | Public goods; disease surveillance; shared health rules; common goods. | |
| 4. Trade | ‘International trade policies and agreements need to be placed
within the context of protecting and promoting health and
wellbeing’. ( | Trade; globalisation; economic growth; liberalisation. | |
| 5. Human rights | ‘Health as a human right moves health provision from a
discretionary charitable activity to a human entitlement or
global citizenship right, adding moral force to actions and
appeals to help the poor. Advancing health as a human right is
consistent with advancing other human rights, such as civil and
political rights imbued in democracy (believed to have positive
influence on health), as well as social and economic rights’.
( | Human rights; democracy; justice; advocacy; collective rights; citing UN charter, Vienna declaration and so on. | |
| 6. Ethical/moral reasoning | ‘Health has special importance to an individual’s experience of
security or dignity . . . Health is both ‘intrinsically and
instrumentally valuable’. But achieving it demands resources for
capabilities. This immediately surfaces questions of
| Morals; ethics; dignity; social justice. |
ASEAN health and foreign policy frames.
| Title | Year published | Identified policy frame(s) | Example | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy ASEAN 2020 | 2000 | Human rights |
| |
| Development | ||||
| Declaration of the eighth ASEAN Health Ministers Meeting, Unity in Health Emergencies, 21 June 2006, Yangon | 2006 | Security |
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| 13th ASEAN Regional Forum, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 28 July 2006 | 2006 | Security | ‘ |
|
| 12th ASEAN Regional Forum, Vientiane, Lao PDR, 29 July 2005 | 2005 | Security | ‘ |
|
| ASEAN Socio-cultural community (ASCC) Blueprint | 2009 | Security | ‘Consolidate, further strengthen and develop regional cooperative arrangements through multisectoral and integrated approaches in the prevention, control, preparedness for emerging infectious diseases’ |
|
| ‘Ensure that stockpile of antivirals and Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) is maintained at regional level for all member states’. (p. 9) | ||||
| Development |
EU health and foreign policy frames.
| Title | Year published | Identified policy frame(s) | Example | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treaty of Nice | 2003 | Overarching/intersectoral issue | ‘A high level of human health protection shall be ensured in the definition and implementation of all Community policies and activities’. (art.152 [TN], art. 168 [TL]) |
|
| Treaty of Lisbon | 2009 | |||
| EU Health Strategy –‘Together for Health’ (2008–2013) | 2007 | Development | ‘Health is important for the wellbeing of individuals and society, but a healthy population is also a prerequisite for economic productivity and prosperity. [ . . . ] Spending on health is not just a cost, it is an investment’. (p. 5) |
|
| Development | ‘Health as an important element in the fight against poverty through health-related aspects of external development cooperation with low income countries’. (p. 6) | |||
| Overarching/intersectoral issue | ‘Health is not an issue for health policy alone’.(p. 6) | |||
| Security | ‘Pandemics, major physical and biological incidents and bioterrorism pose potential major threats to health. Climate change is causing new communicable disease patterns. It is a core part of the Community’s role in health to coordinate and respond rapidly to health threats globally and to enhance the EC’s and third countries’ capacities to do so. This relates to the Commission’s overall strategic objective of Security’. (p. 3) | |||
| ‘Communication on The EU Role in Global Health’,
| 2010 | Development | ‘Health is influenced by social, economic and environmental factors which are increasingly influenced by globalisation. Globally, improved health also depends on greater social justice’. (p. 2) |
|
| Development | ‘Health as an essential objective within the MDG framework [ . . . ] Health is a critical element to reduce poverty and promote sustainable growth. [ . . . ] Special attention is given to poverty-related diseases and to the crisis of human resources for health’. (p. 4) | |||
| European research and knowledge for global health SEC (2010) 381 final | 2010 | Global public goods (GPG) | ‘Control (possibly eradication) of communicable diseases is one clear example of a GPG. It would benefit everyone, in poorer and richer countries alike and in present and future generations . . .’ (p. 4) |
|
| GPG | ‘Research and development to generate medical knowledge is another example of a public good that is inherently global in nature’. (p. 4) | |||
| Contributing to universal coverage of health services through development policy SEC(2010) 382 final | 2010 | Human rights | ‘The EU is committed to protecting and promoting health as a human right for all’. (p. 11) |
|
| Global health – responding to the challenges of globalisation SEC(2010) 380 final | 2010 | Security | ‘Health can be a good entry point to initiate dialogue across borders, thus contributing to building trust between parties’. (p. 24) |
|
| Development | ‘Health does not only contribute to economic growth, it also represents a major provider of employment in the EU and globally’. (p. 12) | |||
| Council conclusions on the EU role in Global Health, 3011th Foreign Affairs Council Meeting | 2010 | Human rights/Development | ‘Health is central in people’s lives, including as a human right, and a key element for equitable and sustainable growth and development, including poverty reduction’. (p. 1) |
|
| Investing in health. (2013) | 2013 | Development | ‘Health is a value in itself. It is also a precondition for economic prosperity. People’s health influences economic outcomes in terms of productivity, labour supply, human capital and public spending’. (p. 1) |
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SADC health and foreign policy frames.
| Title | Year published | Identified policy frame(s) | Example | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SADC Health Protocol | 1999 | Development |
|
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| Trade |
| |||
| Human rights |
| |||
| Regional Indicative Strategic Development Plan | 2003 | Development |
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| Maseru Declaration on the Fight against HIV/AIDS in the SADC Region | 2003 | Development |
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| SADC Declaration on Poverty Eradication and Sustainable Development | 2008 | Development |
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| Sexual and reproductive health business plan for the SADC region 2011–2015 | 2012 | Development | Among the main goals of the plan is to |
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| SADC Strategy for Pooled Procurement of Essential Medicines and Health Commodities 2013–2017 | 2012 | Development | SADC’s common agenda includes promotion of
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| Trade |
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UNASUR health and foreign policy frames.
| Title | Year published | Identified policy frame(s) | Example | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UNASUR constitutive treaty | 2008 | Ethical reasoning |
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| Resolution 9/2011. Declaration of the UNASUR South American Health Council on strengthening national health systems. | 2011 | Development/ethical reasoning |
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| ISAGS 3-year working plan 2012–2015 | 2011 | Human Right/Public Good/Development | A fundamental right of a human being and of society and a vital component for human development; Driving force of regional integration. Central component of social protection and harmonious social development. Space for the reduction of existing asymmetries among countries. A public good that regards the joining of society and space as vital for citizen participation’. |
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| Constitution of the South American Council for Health No. 01/09-21/04/2009 | 2009 | Human rights |
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| Security |
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| UNASUR Salud Plan Quinquenal 2010–2015 | 2009 | Human rights |
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| Development |
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| RINS (Network of National Institutes of Health)/UNASUR Plan Quinquenal 2011–2015 | 2010 | Human rights |
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| Development |
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