Partnership and Participation-A Social Network Analysis of the 2017 Global Fund Application Process in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda.

Annals of Global Health
Katharine D ShelleyGlobal Fund Prospective Country Evaluation IHME/PATH consortium collaborators

Abstract

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was founded in 2002 as a public-private partnership between governments, the private sector, civil society, and populations affected by the three diseases. A key principle of the Global Fund is country ownership in accessing funding through "engagement of in-country stakeholders, including key and vulnerable populations, communities, and civil society." Research documenting whether diverse stakeholders are actually engaged and on how stakeholder engagement affects processes and outcomes of grant applications is limited. To examine representation during the 2017 Global Fund application process in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda and the benefits and drawbacks of partnership to the process. We developed a mixed-methods social network survey to measure network structure and assess perceptions of how working together in partnership with other individuals/organizations affected perceived effectiveness, efficiency, and country ownership of the application process. Surveys were administered from December 2017-May 2018, initially to a set of central actors, followed by any individuals named during the surveys (up to 10) as collaborators. Network analyses were ...Continue Reading

References

Oct 24, 2006·Social Science & Medicine·Kent Buse, Andrew M Harmer
Aug 16, 2011·Health Policy and Planning·Karl Blanchet, Philip James
Feb 18, 2014·Clinical Medicine : Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London·Johanna Hanefeld
Aug 16, 2017·International Journal of Health Policy and Management·Carol KamyaDai Hozumi

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