Nitsan Chorev, Brown University

Health in Economic Terms: The Neoliberal Turn at the World Health Organization
Nitsan Chorev, Department of Sociology, Brown University

Description

Semester: 
Fall 2011
Lecture Time: 
Friday, October 28, 2011 (All day)
Lecture Location: 

Room K1310, Ross School of Business

Abstract

Most descriptions of the dissemination of neoliberal economic policies since the 1980s overlook the significant contribution of international organizations to their making. The scholarship often regards international organizations as passive transmission belts that merely comply with the demands of their member states. Scholars who do identify the influential role of international organizations consider them to be enthusiastic supporters of the neoliberal project. There were cases, however, when international organizations were opposed to the neoliberal reforms imposed from above. This paper draws on the experience of the World Health Organization (WHO) to show that in the process of adapting to the emerging neoliberal regime, international bureaucracies actively restructured this regime in accordance with their own institutional cultures. Some neoliberal prescriptions were successfully transmitted, but others were transformed, with the result that the global regime was hardly monolithic and included elements that were introduced by the international bureaucracies themselves. In developing this argument, the paper identifies the adaptive strategies that allow international bureaucracies, in spite of their vulnerability to external forces, to incorporate their own organizational agendas into what has consequently become a more heterogeneous global neoliberal regime.

Recording & Additional Notes

Introducer: Dana Kornberg, Sociology