The overall objective of Forum 5 is to review progress in addressing the fact that less than ten percent of health research funding tackles 90 percent of the world's health problems. Participants will include policy-makers, researchers, donors and administrators. See the website or email for more information.
Jobs and Announcements
Forum 2015 is a unique global platform to promote the role of research and innovation in creating better health, enhancing equity and stimulating development. The Forum 2015 organisers invite abstract submissions from policymakers, business and community leaders, researchers and scholars, non-profit and international organisations, and any others from various disciplines and sectors whose work addresses key concerns in research and innovation for health and development. The abstracts may be research-focused, clinical-focused, policy-focused or program-focused. The abstract should describe clearly developed-work that is evidence-based. Abstracts describing work that is in early stages of development will not be considered. At the time of the abstract submission, authors may request a poster presentation, an oral presentation, or both. The Forum 2015 will make the final decision on what type of presentation method will be awarded based on the overall program needs
The Global Fund Board just announced the launch of round 9 which will open on 1 October 2008. This is an additional round in order to accelerate progress towards Universal Access and will be followed by the next in March 2009. The opening date is 1st October 2008, the closing date (submission deadline) is not finalised yet and the round 9 grants are expected to be approved by May 2009. Round 9 will use the same proposal form and guidelines that were issued for round 8 - without changes. Round 9 is for new proposals, and it is also an opportunity for countries to resubmit proposals that were rejected in round 8, six months earlier than usual. CCMs will receive Technical Review Panel (TRP) reviews for round 8 one month earlier than usual, so that they have them in time for preparing the round 9 application if necessary.
Please find below a survey that has been developed to support the southern NGO representatives to the Board of the Global Fund to understand better the involvement of the civil society community in the process of accessing resources. Since its inception, the Global Fund has recognized civil society as a key partner in the fight against HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. Along with governments and the private sector,civil society representatives were involved in the Transitional Working Group (TWG),are on the Board, and are now integral to the Country Coordinating Mechanisms (CCMs). As countries prepare proposals for the Second Round, we would like to learn more about civil society experiences with CCMs in the First Round and in the current Round.
This call for papers entitled ‘Gender and health inequalities: intersections with other relevant axes of oppression’ aims to generate knowledge about how gender inequalities in health/disease/mortality/and access to health care systems interact with other important axes of oppression (race/ethnicity, social class, religion, and/or migratory status, among others) through different levels of power (from the global to the local) at different lifetime stages for a population. It also aims to contribute to a better understanding of the relationship between gender (in)equalities and health (inequalities). The editors welcome different types of contributions: empirical research, theoretical papers, methodological papers, and reviews. Studies aiming to contribute to developing gender and social theories building on intersectional, ecosocial, relational, or biosocial approaches are welcome. Also of interest are methodological papers using qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods, and are particularly studies that explore means of better addressing the complexity of analysing health inequalities according to this multidimensional or multiple approach. The editors also welcome papers that address not only issues of dominance and/or suffering but also those about resistance, agency, resilience, and/or empowerment. They encourage submissions from researchers working in low-, middle-, and high-income countries.
4th World Congress - San Francisco - 2003
June 15th - June 18th, 2003
Hilton San Francisco and Towers, California, USA
With the expansion of the world economy and increasing migration, parallel flows have occurred in health systems, medical technology and infectious pathogens. Globalism has increased the need for the development and transfer of accurate health economics research and careful policy analysis. Without it, lessons will go unlearned and mistakes will be repeated. Global health economics offers the potential to improve health for both donor and recipient countries. This is a new and important challenge in the application of economics to health and health care.
Global Health Governance will be publishing a special issue on a proposed Framework Convention on Global Health (FCGH) in December 2014. The proposal for an FCGH would create a new international framework, grounded in the international human right to health, that would support health at the national and global levels. For this FCGH special issue, Global Health Governance invites submission of theoretical and empirical policy research articles that examine and analyse how the FCGH could improve health through improved governance and realization of the right to health, in particular articles on 1) defining and articulating the underlying normative aspects of the FCGH and the prospects of implementing these norms across global, national, and local levels; 2) global health diplomacy and the process of drafting a Framework Convention; 3) institutional and political implementation concerns; 4) the roles of and relationship between state and non-state actors in the formulation and implementation of the FCGH; 5) the connection between existing norms and institutions and the FCGH; 6) strategies and challenges for integrating the norms of the FCGH into existing global, national, and local institutions; 7) accountability under the FCGH; and 8) strategies and challenges for using the FCGH to reshape or build on existing global, national, and local institutions to advance health equity and realization of the right to health. Abstracts (up to 400 words) for proposed articles are due March 30, 2014. Submissions should be made by email, in Microsoft Word format, to Lance Gable.
The Global Health Research Initiative (GHRI) is a partnership formed by five Canadian agencies - the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; the Canadian International Development Agency; Health Canada; the International Development Research Centre; and the Public Health Agency of Canada - to strengthen Canada’s role on the global health research scene. The research component of the 'African Health System Initiative' (AHSI-RES) is a five-year research programme (2008-2013) that forms one component of the African Health System Initiative (AHSI) supported by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). This call for proposals invites teams of researchers and decision-makers to submit research proposals focusing on human resources for health (HRH) and/or health information systems (HIS). Equity is a cross-cutting theme. Registration is due on 13 March 2009. Full application is due on 22 April 2009.
Global civil society has not adequately participated in international health advocacy. Although high-profile success has been achieved with some campaigns, most notably around access to medicines and breastfeeding and certain diseases, there has been a striking lack of involvement and pressure from health campaigners on broader public health and health systems issues. In addition, disparities in health between the rich and the poor have grown at alarming rates both within and between countries, leaving society and the public health movement with a large humanitarian and moral challenge. The People's Health Movement, the Global Equity Gauge Alliance and Medact therefore propose to mobilise a fragmented global health community through the publication of an annual Global Health Watch.
The GHW is putting out a call for the submission of country or region-specific case studies. These case studies will form part of the electronic accompaniment to the alternative World Health Report to be launched in July 2005 at the Peoples health Assembly in Ecuador.
