The Future of Global Health: Building Local Capacity The Editorial Review Board of JGH, in conversation with Lorna Thorpe, Ph.D, MPH (Former Deputy Commissioner of the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene), Anne Paxton, Ph.D, MPH (Director of the Global Health Track, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University), and James Clarke, MD (Director of Crystal Eye Clinic, Unite for Sight)

Main Article Content

The JGH Editorial Board
Lorna Thorpe, PhD, MPH
Anne Paxton, PhD, MPH
James Clarke, MD

Abstract

In the last two decades, the field of global health has experienced a flood of interest and attention. During this time, international organizations, individual countries and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have poured more money and resources than ever into disease eradication initiatives and largescale public health interventions in the developing world. In her 2007 essay entitled “The Challenge of Global Health,” Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Laurie Garrett calls this era of aidgiving the “age of generosity.” She contends that “for the first time in history, the world is poised to spend enormous resources to conquer the diseases of the poor” (Garrett, 2007). Garrett’s claim does not go unwarranted: consider that international developmental assistance in public health rose from US$5.6 billion in 1990 to $21.8 billion in 2007, the year Garrett published her essay (The Lancet, 2009). It is worth noting that only two years later, the U.S. pledged to increase its funding for global health development assistance from $460 million to $8.6 billion (“The Future of Global Health Policy,” 2009).

Article Details

Keywords:
global health, local capacity
Section
Editorial
How to Cite
JGH Editorial Board, T., Thorpe, L., Paxton, A., & Clarke, J. (2011). The Future of Global Health: Building Local Capacity: The Editorial Review Board of JGH, in conversation with Lorna Thorpe, Ph.D, MPH (Former Deputy Commissioner of the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene), Anne Paxton, Ph.D, MPH (Director of the Global Health Track, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University), and James Clarke, MD (Director of Crystal Eye Clinic, Unite for Sight). The Columbia University Journal of Global Health, 1(2), 1–2. https://doi.org/10.7916/thejgh.v1i2.4972