What is it about?

Health care workers are recognized as a cornerstone of health systems and key to the realization of universal health coverage and global social justice. This book shows for the first time that these workers and the issues that their migration and recruitment raises have been a long-term preoccupation of international organisations and global policy making, going right back to the foundations of the UN system and forward to the present day, and beyond. The book asks what kinds of changes in priorities need to happen in respect of global policy on health workers in order to realise universal health coverage as a fundamental human right.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

Our findings show the scope and nature of the historic engagement and commitment to better global governance of health worker mobility in ways that offer useful lessons to inform contemporary policy making, nationally and globally. We emphasise that a wider social policy perspective is needed to make sense of the complex nature of health worker migration and recruitment, one that takes account of health, but also migration, social protection and decent work.

Perspectives

In the course of writing this book we realized that current global initiatives in this area can only be properly understood through history, hence the 'long history' approach that features centrally in the book. History is not a thing of the past, but shapes and informs what happens today, and structures possibilities for the future.

Nicola Yeates
Open University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: International Health Worker Migration and Recruitment, January 2019, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.4324/9781315678641.
You can read the full text:

Read

Resources

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page