Review article
https://doi.org/10.20901/an.17.05
Global Health and Interest of the State
Petar Popović
orcid.org/0000-0003-4770-004X
; Faculty of Political Science, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract
The coronavirus pandemic is the last in a row of global crises that have shed light on the reach and the limitations of international relations theories, especially contemporary realism. The conventional analytical framework that narrows international political relations down to just two levels of analysis, the national and the international, seems inadequate for considering the issue of global health management. This article, therefore, intends to highlight the complex character of and the logic behind global spatial order in the area of global health from the perspective of the sociology of globalization. The implications for the state and its interest are reflected in the dramatic proliferation of different private actors, from pharmaceutical industries to various corporate and philanthropic initiatives. Their expansion has facilitated the positioning of particularly Western economic and military forces in the power arena of global management. However, market logic and the diffuse power of global health have been generating serious global health imbalances between the developed and underdeveloped societies, between strong and weak states. Global disproportion i.e. the catastrophic sanitary conditions in the Third World are in fact the root of potential threats and pandemic outbreaks which, in turn, threaten the very global order. The crucial question thus becomes: What is actually the strategic interest of the state in a global health era?
Keywords
global management; global health; the state; interest; international organization
Hrčak ID:
247041
URI
Publication date:
2.12.2020.
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