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Humanitarianism as a Politics of Life
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2007
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Health PoliticsHead OfficeSocial SciencesMarch 28Medical HistoryPublic HealthHealth PolicyHuman RightsNeglected Diseases InitiativeAfrican OrganizationHumanitarian AidHealth SystemsMedical EthicsInternational HealthInternational OrganizationMedicalizationGlobal Health ChallengeMedicineGlobal Health EpidemiologyPolitical ScienceInternational Institutions
On March 28, 2003, the MSF board met in Paris to review global missions, discuss operational details, and reinforce the organization’s international movement across twenty countries. The DNDi program, launched two years earlier, was discussed as an initiative to create a research and development partnership between private charitable foundations and public entities for neglected diseases.
On March 28, 2003, as on the last Friday of every month, the board of administrators of Medecins sans frontieres (MSF; Doctors without Borders) met between five and eleven o’clock in the organization’s head office on the first floor of a building in the eleventh arrondissement of Paris. On that particular evening a peculiar atmosphere of expectation and excitement reigned. There was of course the customary rapid overview of the situation in a number of “missions” in various parts of the world where the organization intervenes, followed by a more in-depth examination, with discussion of various specific topics concerning the running of the association and its humanitarian activities. The construction of the “international movement” was also raised: it referred to the network of sections in twenty countries, of which six are actually in a position to conduct operations, and which strives to ensure a coherence of identity and policy in the work of each national body beyond the details of local history and culture. The DNDi (Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative) program was another issue addressed: this is an original project that the organization had instigated two years earlier in order to establish, in international collaboration with private charitable foundations and public partners, a program of research and development similar