
Contents
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I. Introduction I. Introduction
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II. Abortion and AIDS in the United States: Social Conservatism Meets Carceral Transnational Governance II. Abortion and AIDS in the United States: Social Conservatism Meets Carceral Transnational Governance
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A. Abortion A. Abortion
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B. AIDS B. AIDS
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III. American Litigation, Transnational Impact III. American Litigation, Transnational Impact
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IV. Contradictions in Global Health Governance IV. Contradictions in Global Health Governance
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V. Conclusion V. Conclusion
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Selective Bibliography Selective Bibliography
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42 Climate Change Governance, International Relations, and Politics: A Transnational Law Perspective
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9 Transnational Legal Orders and Global Health
Get accessAziza Ahmed is Professor of Law at Boston University School of Law. She writes in the area of public health law, science and technology studies, and feminist legal theory, and her scholarship has appeared in journals such as Boston University Law Review, Journal of Law and Biosciences, and the Wisconsin Law Review.
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Published:14 April 2021
Cite
Abstract
In studying how public health laws operate, many scholars and practitioners frequently put the the state in the center. This chapter argues that we must look beyond the state. By utilizing a transnational law frame, scholars and practitioners are able to see the many international, regional, and domestic actors that shape national lawmaking on health. A transnational legal analysis allows for the assessment of the factors, including the broader sociopolitical and economic forces that inform lawmaking and domestic actors as they are subject to intersecting layers of governance emanating from national, international, and transnational governance.
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