Appointing Interns/Volunteers!!
You may know someone who is interested in volunteering working with GRAG team across Africa. Our volunteer program is open to everybody, both students, professional and non-professional. Read more
In the News
-
I’M CLEAN AND WANT TO STAY THAT WAY: HIV+ FOR HIV+
2013-03-20 -
Tackling poverty and disease with innovative health financing
2013-03-19 -
Widespread 'Test-And-Treat' HIV Policies Could Increase Dangerous Drug Resistance
2013-03-18 -
CHANGING MY MIND ON TREATMENT AS PREVENTION
2013-03-11 -
Two Global Issues: Homophobia and Hatred!
2013-02-06 -
Extra-couple HIV transmission in sub-Saharan Africa: a mathematical modelling study of survey data
2013-02-05 -
CHEST RESEARCH SPOTLIGHT: ALTERNATIVES TO MONOGAMY: RECONSIDERING “COMMITMENT” IN SAME-SEX MALE RELATIONSHIPS
2013-02-05 -
The Effect of Budget Sequestration on Global Health: Projecting the Human Impact in Fiscal Year 2013
2013-02-01 -
No woman should die giving life
2013-01-31 -
European HIV prevention webinar: The search for an HIV vaccine
2013-01-29
Trading Away Health: How the U.S.’s Intellectual Property Demands for the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement Threaten Access to Medicines
Thursday, 26 July 2012 00:00
Encompassing eleven countries and slated for further expansion across the Asia Pacific region, the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) is a regional trade agreement that will “set the standard for 21st-century trade agreements going forward.”
The TPP negotiations are being conducted in secret, but leaked drafts of the U.S. negotiating positions show that the U.S. is demanding aggressive intellectual property (IP) provisions that would roll back public health safeguards enshrined in international trade law in favor of offering enhanced patent and data protections to pharmaceutical companies, making it harder to gain access to affordable generic drugs and hindering needed innovation.
If the U.S.’s demands are accepted, the TPP agreement will impose new IP rules that could severely restrict access to affordable, life-saving medicines for millions of people. Billed by President Obama as “a model not just for countries in the Pacific region, but for the world generally,” the TPP will set a damaging precedent with serious implications for developing countries where MSF works, and beyond. Download full report
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|



