Hjem
Senter for internasjonal helse

Varselmelding

There has not been added a translated version of this content. You can either try searching or go to the "area" home page to see if you can find the information there

Right to health through litigation? Can court enforced health rights improve health policy?

The project investigates whether litigation can make health policies and -systems in poor countries more equitable by forcing policy-makers and administrators to take seriously their human rights obligations.

Hovedinnhold

Funding: RCN
Coordinator: Siri Gloppen, Christian Michelsens Institute
Duration:  2008-2012
Project page at RCN

 

Project website (CMI)

Focus areas
The project investigates whether litigation can make health policies and -systems in poor countries more equitable by forcing policy-makers and administrators to take seriously their human rights obligations. The project addresses three sets of questions:

  • How does litigation on health rights affect health policy and -spending in low- and middle-income countries? Does it lead to more or less fairness in treatment of various groups of patients?
  • What drives the “litigation wave”? How does international human rights norms enter into domestic litigation in these cases?
  • How do courts negotiate this technically complex and often politically sensitive terrain?