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Corporate Social Responsibility
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3.20.2008 - 11:45am ET
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Aspen Institute Receives $8.7 Million Grant from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for Ministerial Leadership Initiative for Global Health
(CSRwire) WASHINGTON, DC - March 20, 2008 - A significant new grant from the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation will strengthen the leadership capacity of health
ministers and their senior staff in select countries, and support renewed
efforts to have a positive impact on women's health around the world.
The four-year, $8,714,441 grant to the Aspen Institute will support the
Ministerial Leadership Initiative for Global Health (MLI) -- an innovative
project of Realizing Rights, the Health Financing Task Force and the
Council of Women World Leaders, designed to meet the critical need for
political leadership to address major global health challenges. MLI
partners will work with select ministers of health and their senior staff
to improve the equity and effectiveness of public and aid financing for
health. Participating ministerial teams also will become part of a cohort
of leaders engaged in peer learning activities, providing a network of
mutual support for reform, and a platform for exposure on the
international stage.
Mary Robinson, President of Realizing Rights, stressed the importance of
political leadership in achieving positive health outcomes: "We have the
resources and technology needed to reach the Millennium Development Goals
[MDGs] for health - what we need now is the political will to employ them.
If we are serious about meeting the MDGs, we need to be serious about
supporting political will and action. The Ministerial Leadership
Initiative is pioneering a demand-driven and practice-based leadership
development model to do just that."
This initiative focuses on the critical importance of ministerial
knowledge and decision-making skills in building sustainable health
systems that provide quality, accessible and affordable healthcare.
"Political leadership is critical to ensure that effective health
interventions reach women and their families," said Kathy Cahill, Deputy
Director of Integrated Health Solutions Development at the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation, "The Ministerial Leadership Initiative will provide
valuable support to government leaders addressing serious health
challenges in their countries."
"In some countries, key health indicators are sliding backward, and
vulnerable populations, including women, are suffering the most," said
Laura Liswood, Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders.
"Ministers often act in isolation in their countries; there are few forums
available for them to share experiences and learn from one another. MLI is
providing this much needed space."
The Ministerial Leadership Initiative Calls for
Submissions
MLI has issued a call for submissions to participate in the technical
assistance program that will support selected ministries of health. (To
view the call for submissions and obtain more information, please visit http://www.healthfinancingtaskforce.org.)
Competitively selected, up to five ministers of health and their teams
will receive three years of leadership and technical support to assist
them with their efforts to design and implement reforms geared toward
pro-poor health financing and donor alignment and harmonization.
There is an urgent need for data, skills and expertise to strategically
apply new approaches to public health policy. "Ministers need support
that is technically-driven," David de Ferranti, Chair and Director of the
Health Financing Task Force, stated, "but also tailored to their positions
as political leaders." MLI will support ministries through direct
technical assistance, peer learning, and practical, business-style cases
highlighting ministerial-led best practice.
Extensive consultation with health ministers from around the world has
revealed a demand for leadership support grounded in practical experience.
Prof. Eyitayo Lambo, Nigeria's Minister of Health from 2003 to 2007 and
MLI Advisory Council member commented,"[M]inisters of health need to find
ways to get health high on the political agenda of the country. They need
to have the skills required to argue their cases in the cabinet, to be
able to argue too with counterparts, particularly the minister of
finance."
For further information on the Ministerial Leadership Initiative, please
contact Peggy Clark, Managing Director, Realizing Rights/Washington, DC
Tel:+1-202-736-1081; Email: peggy.clark@aspeninst.org.
Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative aims to put
human rights principles and standards at the heart of global governance
and policy-making, ensuring the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable
are addressed on the global stage. Realizing Rights programs address
health, equitable trade and decent work, women's leadership and corporate
responsibility issues. In Africa, Realizing Rights works with political,
civil society and business leaders to promote innovative policy solutions
which promote greater respect for human rights. (www.realizingrights.org)
The Health Financing Task Force is an international body of
prominent public and private leaders dedicated to helping developing
countries achieve more effective financing of health services, and thereby
to improve health and contribute to poverty reduction. The HFTF was created
in response to the absence of attention to systemic health financing for
health and social protection and the role it plays in making the right to
health a reality in developing countries. (www.healthfinancingtaskforce.org)
The Council of Women World Leaders' mission is to mobilize the
highest-level women leaders globally for collective action on issues of
critical importance to women. The Council for Women World Leaders is a
network of current and former women presidents and prime ministers. The
Council's mission is to mobilize the highest-level women leaders globally
for collective action on issues of critical importance to women and
equitable development. (www.womenworldleaders.org)
About The Aspen Institute
The Aspen Institute, founded in 1950, is an international nonprofit
organization dedicated to fostering enlightened leadership and open-minded
dialogue. Through seminars, policy programs, conferences and leadership
development initiatives, the Institute and its international partners seek
to promote nonpartisan inquiry and an appreciation for timeless values. The
Institute is headquartered in Washington, DC, and has campuses in Aspen,
Colorado, and on the Wye River near the shores of the Chesapeake Bay in
Maryland. Its international network includes partner Aspen Institutes in
Berlin, Rome, Lyon, Tokyo, New Delhi, and Bucharest, and leadership
initiatives in Africa, Central America, and India.
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