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LAUNCH | The Lancet Commission on peaceful societies through health equity and gender equality

澳门六合彩, in partnership with The Lancet, hosted the launch of the Lancet Commission on peaceful societies through health equity and gender equality's report which examines how health equity and gender equality can make our societies more peaceful.

Date & Time

Thursday
Sep. 7, 2023
9:00am聽鈥撀10:30am ET

Location

Online Only

Overview

鈥淭he message of the report we are issuing today is clear: health equity and gender equality have a unique and powerful ability to contribute to peace,鈥 said Finland鈥檚 former President Tarja Halonen at the recent launch event at 澳门六合彩 for a new report by the Lancet Commission on peaceful societies through health equity and gender quality.

President Halonen is the Commission Chair for this report, and the event鈥攈osted in partnership with The Lancet鈥攐ffered her a chance to reflect on its key findings. 鈥淥ur research suggests that processes to advance health equity and gender equality are more powerful when they operate together,鈥 she said, 鈥渢hrough access to comprehensive sexual and reproductive healthcare. The report underlines that health equity and gender equality principles and processes must be led by communities and tailored to their context.鈥

This was launched in 2019, and its task was to assess and elucidate with the interrelationships between Sustainable Development Goal 3 (SDG 3) on health, SDG 5 on gender equality, and SDG 16, which is related to peace. The new report finds that tangible and meaningful improvements in health equity and gender equality not only advance dignity and potential, but they also place societies on a pathway towards more enduring peace.

鈥淭hese findings have massive implications for policymakers and politicians, and for those of us who work in health: it鈥檚 not just for decisionmakers, it鈥檚 for all of us as citizens,鈥 said Dr. Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief at The Lancet. 鈥淭he findings of the report urge us to consider health equity and gender equality as more than social values and norms.鈥

Reinforcing Cycles

The theory of change articulated in the Commission鈥檚 report is that health equity and gender equality improvements can enable societies to transition from harmful to beneficial cycles.聽

Health and gender outcomes are shaped by broader social and economic processes and interact with each other in feedback loops, explained Val Percival, DrPH, lead author for the Commission report and a Wilson Center Fellow. 鈥淭o enable us to analyse these complex relationships, we adopted the concept of self-reinforcing cycles,鈥 observed Percival. 鈥淕ender inequality, health inequity and violence reinforce each other, creating a harmful cycle.鈥

President Halonen noted that a significant change in the value of one of the variables can prompt the dynamic of the cycle to shift. 鈥淚mprovements to health equity and gender equality can transform societal systems and enable communities to transition from harmful to beneficial cycles, putting them on a pathway to sustainable peace and wellbeing,鈥 she said.

Percival also stated that 鈥渃ommunities and policy makers struggle to respond to multiple and overlapping crises, ranging from the social and economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic, the impacts of climate change including food insecurity and natural disasters, and rising violence. We use the framing of the within our report and illustrate how improvements to gender equality and health equity transform social, economic and political systems to provide a feasible and practical pathway for communities out of these harmful cycles of violence and inequity and into beneficial cycles of peace.鈥

The findings in the Commission report also suggest that improvements to health equity and gender equality can be catalytic when they are led by communities鈥攁nd even transform society over the long term.聽 鈥淭hey transform the way we see each other and individual agency and capabilities. And they challenge and shift power within society,鈥 said Percival.

Carolyn Chisadza, PhD, co-author of the Commission report and Senior Lecturer at the University of Pretoria, South Africa, noted that 鈥渆ach report recommendation is interconnected鈥攖hey should not be implemented one by one, as they do not work in isolation.鈥 She added that these changes also need to be endogenous, with civil society actors leading the coordination process at the local and national levels and helping to monitor progress.

The primary recommendations of the Lancet Commission report take the view that for change from the 鈥渋nside out.鈥 In practice, this means that health responses should embrace, advance, and advocate for gender equality; initiatives to advance health equity and gender equality should support openness, inclusivity, and accountability 鈥 and be data driven; and national and global agendas for development and conflict must incorporate health equity and gender equality.

鈥淎s UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and Secretary General Ban Ki-moon before him have underlined: ,鈥 said President Halonen. She added that gender equality is both a human right and a precondition for a successful and peaceful society: 鈥淲omen and girls often bear the heaviest burden in crises, including as health-care workers, family caretakers, or when facing violence or lack of essential services. On the other hand, women鈥檚 participation in peace processes leads to more durable peace agreements and their role in decision-making can critically strengthen the response and resilience of society.鈥

Dr. Ahmed Al-Mandhari, Regional Director for Eastern Mediterranean at the World Health Organization (WHO) observed that 鈥渨e in the health community must assertively say, and act upon it, that there is no health without peace and there is no peace without healthy societies.鈥 He argued that while prioritizing is a priority, it also is imperative that we understand the drivers of conflict and embed conflict analysis into health programming.聽

鈥淚n conflict-affected countries,鈥 said Dr. Al-Mandhari, 鈥渢he World Health Organization is promoting a health development and peace nexus approach, training humanitarian and development workers on both public health and peace outcomes.鈥

Keys to Peaceful Societies

The discussion at the report launch also identified . 鈥淲e need to provide social support to advocates, as advocacy can be an extremely isolating experience. Advocates face pressure from international organizations to pursue objectives a certain way and from governments who oppose their views, leaving them with little support,鈥 said Dr. Alaa Murabit, Director of Program Advocacy and Communications and Health at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Dr. Murabit added that allows local advocates to quickly shift their strategies to adapt to fluid situations. 鈥淚n conflict-afflicted societies, red tape and lengthy application processes for funding are a major hurdle. We need to avoid tokenizing local voices and recognize that they can often wield enormous power locally, not just on the international stage,鈥 she said.

Donors are another key to finding solutions. 鈥淎n interdisciplinary approach is essential but can be hamstrung sometimes by a narrow sectoral program. These programs may result in a successful output, but not always transformative change,鈥 said Chris Milligan, a former Counselor at the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). 鈥淚n Madagascar, despite decades of USAID (and other donor) support, GDP per capita is lower than it was in 1980. This is due to cycles of conflict and instability erasing any gains made by narrow programs focused on disease treatment, food insecurity, etcetera.鈥

Milligan explained that institutional silos and the structure of the development system make it difficult to promote : each sector has its own experts, theories, frameworks, indicators, and even earmarked funding. 鈥淭hese can鈥檛 be changed overnight. Funding sources may be siloed, but implementation does not have to be,鈥 Milligan said.

鈥淲e should rethink how we can use health funding to empower local leaders and promote good governance. Strategies should be based on a sophisticated understanding of the unique social, political, and economic dynamics of the country they are being applied in.鈥

Another key component in the process is encouraging self-guided leadership within countries and embracing the need for new leaders, including women and young people. 鈥淵outh is incredibly important. As seniors in the field, we need to pave the way for young people to be at the decision tables,鈥 said Peter Friberg, PhD, a Professor at the University of Gothenburg and a co-chair of the Lancet Commission.

Yet as Chris Milligan noted, any push for new leaders must align with the emphasis on community at the heart of the report鈥檚 recommendations: 鈥淲e should recognize the importance of local communities and invest in building the next generation of local leaders.鈥

Written by Sarah B. Barnes, edited by Richard Byrne.聽

Speakers

Photo of Ahmed Al-Mandhari

Dr. Ahmed Al-Mandhari

Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean, World Health Organization聽
Carolyn Chisadza photo

Carolyn Chisadza

Commissioner; Senior Lecturer, University of Pretoria
Peter Friberg

Peter Friberg

Commission Co-chair; Professor, University of Gothenburg
Tarja Halonen photo

Tarja Halonen

Former President of Finland; Commission Chair
Photo of Richard Horton

Dr. Richard Horton

Editor-in-Chief, The Lancet
Photo of Chris Milligan

Chris Milligan

Former Counselor, United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
Alaa Murabit

Dr. Alaa Murabit

Director, Program Advocacy and Communications, Health, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Valerie Percival

Valerie Percival

Lead Author, Wilson Center fellow

Moderator

Pam Das Speaker Photo

Pam Das

Senior Executive Editor, The Lancet

Hosted By

Maternal Health Initiative

澳门六合彩鈥檚 Maternal Health Initiative (MHI) is dedicated to improving the lives of women, adolescents, and children around the world. MHI convenes experts from around the world to discuss solutions to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths and to navigate gender-based global health issues and their links to foreign policy. MHI explores a wide range of policy-related topics, including gender equity, global health, health care workforce and systems, caregiving, gender-based violence, workforce participation, girls鈥 education, and sexual and reproductive health and rights. MHI is globally focused with additional attention to women and girls living in humanitarian settings.  Read more

Canada Institute

The mission of 澳门六合彩's Canada Institute is to raise the level of knowledge of Canada in the United States, particularly within the Washington, DC policy community.聽 Research projects, initiatives, podcasts, and publications cover contemporary Canada, US-Canadian relations, North American political economy, and Canada's global role as it intersects with US national interests.  Read more

Environmental Change and Security Program

The Environmental Change and Security Program (ECSP) explores the connections between environmental change, health, and population dynamics and their links to conflict, human insecurity, and foreign policy.  Read more

Middle East Program

澳门六合彩鈥檚 Middle East Program serves as a crucial resource for the policymaking community and beyond, providing analyses and research that helps inform US foreign policymaking, stimulates public debate, and expands knowledge about issues in the wider Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.  Read more

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