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Brexit and trade policy: an analysis of the governance of UK trade policy and what it means for health and social justice.

May Ci van SchalkwykPepita BarlowGabriel Siles-BrüggeHolly JarmanTamara HerveyMartin McKee
Published in: Globalization and health (2021)
The establishment of a new trade policy agenda calls for robust systems of governance. However, our analysis demonstrates that, despite decades of mounting evidence on the health and equity impacts of trade and the importance of strong systems of governance, the UK government has largely ignored this evidence and failed to galvanise the opportunity to include public health and equity considerations and strengthen democratic involvement in trade policy. This underscores the point that the evidence alone will not guarantee that health and justice are prioritised. Rather, we need strong systems of governance everywhere that can help seize the health benefits of international trade and minimise its detrimental impacts. A failure to strengthen governance risks poor policy design and implementation, with unintended and inequitable distribution of harms, and 'on-paper' commitments to health, social justice, and democracy unfulfilled in practice. Although the detailed findings relate to the situation in the UK, the issues raised are, we believe, of wider relevance for those with an interest of governing for health in the area of international trade.
Keyphrases
  • public health
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  • global health
  • mental health
  • primary care
  • health information
  • human health
  • cross sectional
  • mental illness
  • social media