Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Current definitions of 'global health' lack specificity about the term 'global'. This debate presents and discusses existing definitions of 'global health' and a common problem inherent therein. It aims...

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Main Author: Bozorgmehr Kayvan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-10-01
Series:Globalization and Health
Online Access:http://www.globalizationandhealth.com/content/6/1/19
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spelling doaj-cebfc0b2e163442f8727a7dba5c40d8c2020-11-25T00:01:47ZengBMCGlobalization and Health1744-86032010-10-01611910.1186/1744-8603-6-19Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approachBozorgmehr Kayvan<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Current definitions of 'global health' lack specificity about the term 'global'. This debate presents and discusses existing definitions of 'global health' and a common problem inherent therein. It aims to provide a way forward towards an understanding of 'global health' while avoiding redundancy. The attention is concentrated on the dialectics of different concepts of 'global' in their application to malnutrition; HIV, tuberculosis & malaria; and maternal mortality. Further attention is payed to normative objectives attached to 'global health' definitions and to paradoxes involved in attempts to define the field.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>The manuscript identifies denotations of 'global' as 'worldwide', as 'transcending national boundaries' and as 'holistic'. A fourth concept of 'global' as 'supraterritorial' is presented and defined as 'links between the social determinants of health anywhere in the world'. The rhetorical power of the denotations impacts considerably on the object of 'global health', exemplified in the context of malnutrition; HIV, tuberculosis & malaria; and maternal mortality. The 'global' as 'worldwide', as 'transcending national boundaries' and as 'holistic' house contradictions which can be overcome by the fourth concept of 'global' as 'supraterritorial'. The 'global-local-relationship' inherent in the proposed concept coheres with influential anthropological and sociological views despite the use of different terminology. At the same time, it may be assembled with other views on 'global' or amend apparently conflicting ones. The author argues for detaching normative objectives from 'global health' definitions to avoid so called 'entanglement-problems'. Instead, it is argued that the proposed concept constitutes an un-euphemistical approach to describe the inherently politicised field of 'global health'.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>While global-as-worldwide and global-as-transcending-national-boundaries are misleading and produce redundancy with public and international health, global-as-supraterritorial provides 'new' objects for research, education and practice while avoiding redundancy. Linked with 'health' as a human right, this concept preserves the rhetorical power of the term 'global health' for more innovative forms of study, research and practice. The dialectic approach reveals that the contradictions involved in the different notions of the term 'global' are only of apparent nature and not exclusive, but have to be seen as complementary to each other if expected to be useful in the final step.</p> http://www.globalizationandhealth.com/content/6/1/19
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bozorgmehr Kayvan
spellingShingle Bozorgmehr Kayvan
Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach
Globalization and Health
author_facet Bozorgmehr Kayvan
author_sort Bozorgmehr Kayvan
title Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach
title_short Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach
title_full Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach
title_fullStr Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach
title_sort rethinking the 'global' in global health: a dialectic approach
publisher BMC
series Globalization and Health
issn 1744-8603
publishDate 2010-10-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Current definitions of 'global health' lack specificity about the term 'global'. This debate presents and discusses existing definitions of 'global health' and a common problem inherent therein. It aims to provide a way forward towards an understanding of 'global health' while avoiding redundancy. The attention is concentrated on the dialectics of different concepts of 'global' in their application to malnutrition; HIV, tuberculosis & malaria; and maternal mortality. Further attention is payed to normative objectives attached to 'global health' definitions and to paradoxes involved in attempts to define the field.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>The manuscript identifies denotations of 'global' as 'worldwide', as 'transcending national boundaries' and as 'holistic'. A fourth concept of 'global' as 'supraterritorial' is presented and defined as 'links between the social determinants of health anywhere in the world'. The rhetorical power of the denotations impacts considerably on the object of 'global health', exemplified in the context of malnutrition; HIV, tuberculosis & malaria; and maternal mortality. The 'global' as 'worldwide', as 'transcending national boundaries' and as 'holistic' house contradictions which can be overcome by the fourth concept of 'global' as 'supraterritorial'. The 'global-local-relationship' inherent in the proposed concept coheres with influential anthropological and sociological views despite the use of different terminology. At the same time, it may be assembled with other views on 'global' or amend apparently conflicting ones. The author argues for detaching normative objectives from 'global health' definitions to avoid so called 'entanglement-problems'. Instead, it is argued that the proposed concept constitutes an un-euphemistical approach to describe the inherently politicised field of 'global health'.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>While global-as-worldwide and global-as-transcending-national-boundaries are misleading and produce redundancy with public and international health, global-as-supraterritorial provides 'new' objects for research, education and practice while avoiding redundancy. Linked with 'health' as a human right, this concept preserves the rhetorical power of the term 'global health' for more innovative forms of study, research and practice. The dialectic approach reveals that the contradictions involved in the different notions of the term 'global' are only of apparent nature and not exclusive, but have to be seen as complementary to each other if expected to be useful in the final step.</p>
url http://www.globalizationandhealth.com/content/6/1/19
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