CFR/Milbank Memorial Fund Roundtable on Health and U.S. Foreign Policy
Director: Jordan S. Kassalow
November 1, 2001 - January 1, 2003
The health of the world has expanded from a humanitarian issue to an issue of national security and economic growth. Global health not only has an impact on most of the foreign policy objectives we hope to achieve, but also a direct effect on the health of Americans, especially as globalization frays our national boundaries. A focus on health is part of a foreign policy agenda that aims at building a more secure world, draws all countries into a growing network of interdependence that sustains stability and maintains America’s central role within that network. This roundtable series brings leaders from the foreign policy and health communities together to discuss the recommendations of the CFR-Milbank Memorial Fund report, “Why Health is Important to U.S. Foreign Policy,” and to discuss contemporary topics that form the nexus between global health and U.S. foreign policy
Bio-terrorism is the one of the deadliest threats facing the United States today. This roundtable, in light of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, discusses measures to protect against or mitigate the effects of such a bio-terrorist attack by asking questions such as:
• What is the potential for a significant bioterrorist attack on the United States;
• What public health and related measures can be taken in advance of an attack to reduce their impact;
• Are we currently equipped to deal with the consequences of an attack?
• What type of biological agents can terrorists get their hands on?
• Can they keep them alive and grow enough of them to mount a significant attack?
• Can they weaponize them effectively to mount a massive attack that puts tens to hundreds of thousands at risk;
• How much money is needed to prepare the United States for a large scale biological terrorist attack?
• How the money should be allocated, which programs/agencies should be funded?
Meetings
Roundtable Meeting
SARS: How Was It Handled and Will It Return?
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow
Speaker: David Heymann, World Health Organization
November 17, 2003
Roundtable Meeting
U.S. Corporate Leadership and Global Health
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow, Council on Foreign Relations
Speaker: Raymond Gilmartin, Merck & Co., Inc.
October 28, 2002
Contact Denise Gomes at 212-434-9634 or dgomes@cfr.org
Roundtable Meeting
U.S. Reproductive Health Policy
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow, Council on Foreign Relations
Speaker: Susan Cohen, Alan Guttmacher Institute
October 17, 2002
Contact Denise Gomes at 212-434-9634 or dgomes@cfr.org
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Roundtable Meeting
U.S. Role in Global Health Policy
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow
Speaker: Jack Chow, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Health and Science Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental Scientific Affairs and Special Representative of the Secretary of State for HIV/AIDS
June 27, 2002
Contact: Denise Gomes 212-434-9634 or dgomes@cfr.org
Roundtable Meeting
Russia's Health Crisis: Implications for its National Security
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow
Speaker: Murray Feshbach, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
May 30, 2002
Contact: Denise Gomes 212-434-9634 or dgomes@cfr.org
Roundtable Meeting
The Bioterrorist Threat to Food and Agriculture
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow
Speaker: Catherine O'Connor Woteki, Iowa State University
April 18, 2002
Contact: Denise Gomes at 212-434-9634 or dgomes@cfr.org
Roundtable Meeting
America’s Response to Terrorism: Bioterrorism—Threat and Response
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow
Speaker: Jonathan B. Tucker, Director, Chemical and Biological Weapons Nonproliferation Program, Monterey Institute of International Studies
November 6, 2001
Roundtable Meeting
Health and International Development
Presider: Jordan S. Kassalow
Speaker: Jeffrey D. Sachs, Director, Center for International Development, Harvard University
October 15, 2001
Contact: Denise Gomes 212-434-9634 or dgomes@cfr.org
National Program Meeting
Why Health Should Be on the Foreign Policy Agenda (Miami)
Panelist: Ambler H. Moss Jr., Director, Dante B. Fascell North-South Center at the University of Miami
Speaker: Jordan S. Kassalow
September 6, 2001
With globalization and interdependence on the rise, transnational issues increasingly threaten national security, economics, trade, and human development. Jordan Kassalow will discuss why global health issues need to be integrated into America's foreign policy agenda.
National Program Meeting
Why Health Should Be on the Foreign Policy Agenda (San Francisco)
Panelist: A. Lawrence Chickering, President, Educate Girls Globally
Speaker: Jordan S. Kassalow, Adjunct Senior Fellow, Global Health Policy, Council on Foreign Relations
May 24, 2001
National Program Meeting
Why Health Should Be on the Foreign Policy Agenda (Atlanta)
Panelist: Helene D. Gayle, (Host and Chair); Director, National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Speaker: Jordan S. Kassalow, Adjunct Senior Fellow, Global Health Policy, Council on Foreign Relations
April 24, 2001
With globalization and interdependence on the rise, transnational issues like global health threats increasingly pose dangers to national security,
economics, trade, and human development. Jordan Kassalow will explain why global health needs to be integrated into Americas foreign policy agenda.