
Contents
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10.1 Introduction 10.1 Introduction
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10.2 What BRICS Can Contribute to Global Health 10.2 What BRICS Can Contribute to Global Health
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10.2.1 Financial Assistance 10.2.1 Financial Assistance
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10.2.2 Medical Goods and Services 10.2.2 Medical Goods and Services
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10.2.3 Technical Assistance 10.2.3 Technical Assistance
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10.2.4 Improving Access to Medicines and Intellectual Property 10.2.4 Improving Access to Medicines and Intellectual Property
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10.2.5 Institutional Frameworks for Health 10.2.5 Institutional Frameworks for Health
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10.2.6 Sharing Lessons Learned 10.2.6 Sharing Lessons Learned
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10.2.7 Building Stronger Economies, Reducing Poverty 10.2.7 Building Stronger Economies, Reducing Poverty
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10.2.8 Emerging Countries’ Role in Global Health Governance 10.2.8 Emerging Countries’ Role in Global Health Governance
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10.2.9 Health as a Foreign Policy Concern 10.2.9 Health as a Foreign Policy Concern
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10.2.10 Emerging Nations’ Performance through the Shared Health Governance Lens 10.2.10 Emerging Nations’ Performance through the Shared Health Governance Lens
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10.3 Some Caveats 10.3 Some Caveats
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10.3.1 Still Emerging and Transitioning 10.3.1 Still Emerging and Transitioning
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10.3.2 A Continuing Need: Help from the Global Community 10.3.2 A Continuing Need: Help from the Global Community
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10.4 Conclusion 10.4 Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
With a growing presence on the world stage, the BRICS nations—Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—are expanding their influence and impact worldwide. These countries can address global health issues as they build their own health systems. They are growing in significance, separately as nations and collectively as a center of gravity. They are assuming multiplying roles in global health, including funding, knowledge generation and dissemination, technical assistance and policy advice, empowerment and agency enhancement, advocacy, surveillance and outbreak response, and health system development. Their emerging economies and health systems link them closely to the developing world’s concerns, while their growing economic and political influence draws them into the company of industrialized countries and gives them a more powerful voice in global affairs. Their emergence as global health actors may call more attention to developing countries’ perspectives and needs.
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