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Abstract

Efforts to govern health globally have broadened considerably since the 1850s in terms of the subjects, goals, participants, and instruments of governance efforts. Originating in a thin, limited set of rules formally agreed by states, the contemporary global health system has evolved into a complex, dense, yet fragmented network involving governance processes both within and outside the health sector, engaging hundreds of state and non-state actors across all countries. Broader global trends shaped health governance, but key features of the current system also owe much to the particularities of specific events: the HIV/AIDS pandemic, West African Ebola crisis, and most recently Covid-19. Can contemporary networked governance processes can add up to a coherent, functional system for protecting global public health, or is more hierarchy needed? The World Health Organization is a central convenor, legitimator, adviser, and political arena in a fragmented system, but has not yet been empowered to assume the role of a directive coordinator. The extent to which major powers will construct a more hierarchical system is an open question in a world that is not yet post-Westphalian nor truly multipolar.

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