High Politics, Low Politics, and Global Health
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Youde, Jeremy
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Oxford University Press
Abstract
It has become commonplace to argue that global health has ascended from “low politics” to the ranks
of “high politics” in international relations—those issues of existential importance to the state and
which concern its very survival. Despite its ubiquity, the actual substance of such a shift in the framing
of global health is largely unexamined. In this article, I argue that empirical evidence belies the idea that
global health is a “high politics” issue. This dichotomy makes little sense, and efforts to reframe global
health as a “high politics” or securitized issue rarely succeed. While it is undoubtedly true that global
health has received significantly greater attention from the international community over the past
twenty-five to thirty years, that attention does not spring from global health being reframed as a “high
politics” issue for states.
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Journal of Global Security Studies
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Open Access