2016
DOI: 10.1590/0102-6445171-197/98
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Abstract: This article analyses changes and continuities in Brazilian international actions in the field of public health, aiming at understanding how the Brazilian foreign policy in health during President Dilma Rousseff's first term (2011-2014) was developed. Available data from President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (2003-2010) years and Dilma's first term were used for comparative purposes. Emphasis was given on South-South cooperation projects, more specifically the Union of South American Countries (USAN, Unión de Na… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The international role of the MoH had already been losing strength at the end of Dilma Rousseff's government (Gómez & Perez, 2016) and under Michel Temer, but it held out until Jair Bolsonaro's first appointment to the MoH. In a book that is an essential document on the period, Luiz Henrique Mandetta describes challenges in appointing the ministry's technical sector.…”
Section: Loss Of Leadership Associated With the Country's Re‐democrat...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The international role of the MoH had already been losing strength at the end of Dilma Rousseff's government (Gómez & Perez, 2016) and under Michel Temer, but it held out until Jair Bolsonaro's first appointment to the MoH. In a book that is an essential document on the period, Luiz Henrique Mandetta describes challenges in appointing the ministry's technical sector.…”
Section: Loss Of Leadership Associated With the Country's Re‐democrat...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, individual national negotiations are leaving South American governments at a disadvantage with respect to the power possessed by multinational laboratories and the medical supplies industry (Lima and Albuquerque 2020;Molano Cruz 2020). The case of Brazil is eloquently unique in that sense, considering the paradox that the government of the most qualified country in Latin America, with capability for its own research on and production of vaccines (Gómez and Perez 2016), was unable to craft a good policy on that issue. Bolsonaro's foreign policy changed Brazil's international course of action on health diplomacy.…”
Section: Regional Governance In Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During former President Lula's two governments (2003-2010) healthcare was a foreign policy agenda 22 highlight, but, during Dilma Rousseff 's presidency, there was a significant deceleration or, certainly, a systemic decline in Brazilian foreign policy 23 instigated by Lula. This was caused mainly by factors such as decreasing budget support for the Ministry of Foreign Relations and also due to the President's focus on domestic matters, and thus impacted the efforts of the Federal Government seeking to unite civil society to collaborate in an international plan 24 .…”
Section: Foreign Policy and Healthcare Diplomacy In The Zika Eramentioning
confidence: 99%