Law, Politics, and Access to Essential Medicines in Developing Countries

Author:

Klug Heinz1

Affiliation:

1. University of Wisconsin-Madison, , School of Law at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

This article argues that to advance the struggle for access to essential medicines, it is necessary to identify the global and local regimes that shape the rules that give impetus to particular policy options, while undermining others. In exploring the role of law and politics in this process, the author first outlines the globalization of a standardized, corporate-inspired, intellectual property regime. Second, the author uses the example of the HIV/AIDS pandemic to demonstrate how the stability of this new regime came under pressure, both locally and globally. Finally, it is argued that while the global HIV/AIDS pandemic and the social movements that emerged in response to government inaction have effectively challenged the TRIPS regime, this complex contestation has reached an unsustainable stalemate in which development aid, corporate, and non-governmental philanthropy is simultaneously providing increased availability to drugs while precluding a more lasting solution to the crisis of access to essential medicines in developing countries.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Sociology and Political Science

Reference67 articles.

1. Global Business Regulation

2. World Health Organization, "Template for Selected Model Indicators for Studying the Impact of Globalization and TRIPS on Access to Medicines," in Network for Monitoring the Impact of Globalization and TRIPS on Access to Medicines, Health Economics and Drugs, EDM Series No. 11: Report of a meeting, February 2001, Bangkok, Thailand, WHO/EDM/PAR/2002.1. (Geneva: WHO, Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy, 2002) 25-35, 27.

3. Greg Behrman, The Invisible People: How the U.S. Has Slept Through the Global AIDS Pandemic, the Greatest Humanitarian Catastrophe of Our Time ( New York: Free Press, 2004), xiii.

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