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This is a book about the human experience of conducting global health research, linked to operational responses to the control and prevention of diseases worldwide. The book's second section draws on case studies of global health partnerships to understand where we are today in global health.
Anna M. Stewart Ibarra, PhD, MPA, Executive Director, Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI)A. Desiree LaBeaud, MD, MS, Professor of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Stanford University, Bechtel Faculty Scholar, Stanford Maternal Child Health Research Institute, Mosbacher Distinguished Packard Fellow
1. Prologue.- 2. Colonialism, decolonization, and global health.- 3. Ethical challenges in global health research.- 4. Gender equity in African academia: An implementation science evaluation of the Kenya context.- 5. A holistic systems approach to global health research, practice, and partnerships.- 6. Team science and infectious disease work: Exploring opportunities and challenges.- 7. Foundations and future directions of global health communication.- 8. Collective learning: Power and trust in partnerships.- 9. Partnering with the community in infectious disease research: A Kenyan experience.- 10. Partnership-based approach to infectious disease research in Papua New Guinea.- 11. Partnerships to improving access to healthcare for refugees and immigrants in Philadelphia.- 12. The strengths and challenges of building partnerships through malaria research: Thailand case study in inter-epidemic and epidemic projects.- 13. Building partnerships and confronting challenges: Implementation ofan Ebola vaccine clinical study during an outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.- 14. Innovative, collaborative approaches that improve responses to epidemics and natural disasters.- 15. Nipah outbreak investigation in Bangladesh, 2007: A case study of One Health partnership and intersectoral coordination.- 16. Addressing sexual and HIV-related stigma in Haiti: Need for societal engagement.- 17. Building partnerships to empower women through home self-sampling for sexual and reproductive tract infections.- 18. Perspectives on community-based participatory research: An approach for more inclusive research.- 19. Gender equality in academia: Thriving as a clinician-scientist, establishing partnerships, and driving policy for change in the Kenya context.- 20. Transforming the planetary health crisis through an Indigenous Land-based meta narrative.- 21. Social movement and empowerment in shaping global health priorities: Past, present, and future.- 22. When women lead in globalhealth: Alternative mobilizations.- 23. Funding for equitable infectious disease research and development.- 24. Educational perspectives from the field: Pathways to the future.- 25. Learning from the past to inform the future: Perspectives on future directions in international health and research.- 26. Engaging with heart in global health partnerships.- 27. Courageous authenticity: Bringing our inner wisdom to our work, partnerships, and communities for deeper partnership.