Measuring the way forward in Haiti: Grounding disaster relief in the legal framework of human rights

Amanda M. Klasing, P. Scott Moses, and Margaret L. Satterthwaite Health and Human Rights 13/1 Published June 2011 Abstract This article provides results from an online survey of humanitarian workers and volunteers that was conducted in May and June 2010. The purpose of the survey was to understand how the humanitarian aid system adopts or incorporates human rights into its post-natural disaster work and metrics. Data collected from Haiti suggest…

Intersection 4: Building health and human rights into communities

Health and Human Rights 13/1 Published June 2011 The importance of creating a “culture of human rights” at the community level is typically discussed in relation to warfare and other forms of official violence. Only rarely do health and other key social and economic rights come into view. Yet it seems clear that commitment by national politicians—without which health will not be prioritized over other pressing individual or social imperatives—depends…

Intersection 3: Health financing and other barriers to universal access

Health and Human Rights 13/1 Published June 2011 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights proclaims that everyone has the right to “a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances…

Intersection 2: Non-communicable diseases and global health equity

Health and Human Rights 13/1 Published June 2011 As recently as 1990, most illness worldwide was attributed to pneumonia, diarrheal disease, and perinatal infection. It is now recognized that by 2020, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) will be responsible for 60% of sicknesses worldwide and seven deaths in every ten. Most will be in the developing world. For governments in high- and middle-income countries, which are feeling the budgetary effects of aging…

Intersection 1: Rights and responsibilities amid climate change and environmental degradation

Health and Human Rights 13/1 Published June 2011   The first decade of the 21st century has seen devastating cyclones, floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, and extreme temperatures. These natural phenomena continue to influence the lives of people around the world, not only through their immediate consequences for population morbidity and mortality, but even more so through displacement, disenfranchisement, and deprivation. The people who suffer most are often those who were most…

Editorial: Intersections of health and human rights

Health and Human Rights 13/1 Published June 2011   Shortly before his death, Jonathan Mann, the founding editor of this journal, imagined its major fields of inquiry as two perpendicular axes describing different dimensions of human well-being. The horizontal axis ranged from medicine, with its focus on individual suffering and intervention, to public health, with its focus on populations. The vertical axis began with ethics, concerned with treatment and behavior…

Recent health and human rights literature

Children’s socio-economic rights, democracy and the courts. Aoife Nolan. Hart Publishing, 2011. ISBN 978-1841137698 (hardcover). 336 pages. $110. Aoife Nolan addresses a crucial and underdeveloped topic in the literature of human rights law: the socio-economic rights of children. Her analysis focuses on the role of the courts in securing and safeguarding these constitutional rights, arguing that judicial activity in these situations is justifiable because of the positive obligations to children…

Abstract – Health and human rights in scientific literature: A systematic review over a decade (1999-2008)

Emmanuel Kabengele Mpinga, Henk Verloo, Leslie London, and Philippe Chastonay Abstract Background Over the past decades, the health and human rights movement has become a public health actor that cannot and should not be ignored when defining public health policies. Little has been published about the scientific contribution of the movement, be it in terms of volume, topics, content, diffusion channels, production, or target sites. Objective This article aims to…

Health and human rights in scientific literature: A systematic review over a decade (1999-2008)

Emmanuel Kabengele Mpinga, Henk Verloo, Leslie London, and Philippe Chastonay Health and Human Rights 13/2 Published December 2011 Abstract Background Over the past decades, the health and human rights movement has become a public health actor that cannot and should not be ignored when defining public health policies. Little has been published about the scientific contribution of the movement, be it in terms of volume, topics, content, diffusion channels, production,…

Abstract – EquiFrame: A framework for analysis of the inclusion of human rights and vulnerable groups in health policies

Mutamad Amin, Malcolm MacLachlan, Hasheem Mannan, Shahla El Tayeb, Amani El Khatim, Leslie Swartz, Alister Munthali, Gert Van Rooy, Joanne McVeigh, Arne Eide, and Marguerite Schneider Health and Human Rights 13/2 Published December 2011 Abstract Ensuring that health policies uphold core concepts of human rights and are inclusive of vulnerable groups are imperative aspects of providing equity in health care, and of realizing the United Nations’ call for Health for…