Health and Human Rights in a Changing World is
a comprehensive and contemporary collection of readings
and original material examining health and human rights
from a global perspective. Editors Grodin, Tarantola,
Annas, and Gruskin are well-known for their previous two
volumes (published by Routledge) on this increasingly
important subject to the global community. The editors
have contextualized each of the five sections with
foundational essays; each reading concludes with
discussion topics, questions, and suggested readings.
This book also includes Points of View
sections—originally written perspectives by important
authors in the field.
Section I is a
Health and Human Rights Overview that lays out the
essential knowledge base and provides the foundation for
the following sections.
Section II brings
in notions of concepts, methods, and governance framing
the application of health and human rights, in
particular the Human Rights-based Approaches to Health.
Section III sheds light on issues of heightened
vulnerability and special protection, stressing that the
health and human rights record of any nation, any
community, is determined by what is being done and not
done about those who are most in need.
Section IV focuses on addressing
system failures where health and human rights issues
have been documented, recognized, even at times
proclaimed as priorities, and yet insufficiently
attended to as a result of State denial, unwillingness,
or incapacity.
Section V examines the
relevance of the health and human rights paradigm to a
changing world, underscoring contemporary global
challenges and responses. Finally, a Concluding
Note brings together the key themes of this set of
articles and attempts to project a vision of the
future.
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