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Front Cover
Barefoot Global Health Diplomacy
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
About the author
About the contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Bare feet: how to do it yourself
1.1 Diplomatic deficits
1.2 Day-to-day diplomacy
1.3 The barefoot diplomat
1.4 Not stepping on toes
1.5 Key messages
References
2. Adaptation: epidemic control and local style
2.1 Adapting the global to the local
2.2 Listening to locals
2.3 A thousand ways to adapt...
2.4 ...And a thousand more (ways to adapt)
2.5 Key messages
References

3. Power to the people: local ownership of infectious disease control
3.1 Local ownership
3.2 Locally led success
3.3 Local protocols
3.4 A confident local voice
3.5 Key messages
References
4. A governance revolution: synergies versus turf battles
4.1 Synergies and post-partisanism
4.2 Optimizing governance synergies
4.3 Innovative policy-level combinations
4.4 Dynamic field-level combinations
4.5 Key messages
References
5. Monitoring and evaluation: capturing barefoot effects
5.1 The pressures of targets
5.2 Capturing downstream benefits

5.3 The dangers of performance mindsets
5.4 Measuring the immeasurable
5.5 Key messages
References
6. War and peace: barefoot diplomacy as military adjunct
6.1 Unlikely bedfellows?
6.2 A new stage for security and stability
6.3 Mutual sacrifice? Lesser evils, greater goods
6.4 Principles, policies, practices
6.5 Key messages
References
7. Trade-offs: ethics versus economics in epidemics
7.1 Numbers and realities
7.2 Beyond mere quantification
7.3 McNamara fallacies
7.4 Reconciling ethics and economics in epidemics
7.5 Key messages
References

8. Blurring the line: a review of barefoot global health diplomacy
8.1 Linking global health with diplomacy redux
8.2 Beyond job descriptions
8.3 Nontraditional skills
8.4 Intangible effects
8.5 Global stability and security
8.6 Key messages
References
Health security considerations to improve the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of Ireland's future infectious disease and ...
Borders and travel
Macro-level public health security policies
Media and public health information
Feasible and enforceable individual-level efforts

Epidemic control equals health security: what developing countries can (still) learn from the global North
Lead time
The primacy of health security
What has worked?
A nascent health security checklist for the developing world
Conclusion: a need for bipartisan health security approaches
Selected glossary
Index
Back Cover

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