The duty of the administration to achieve health security In light of contemporary challenges a comparative study

Authors

  • Shahlaa Sulaiman Mohammed University of Diyala - College of Law Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55716/

Keywords:

Management,, health security,, contemporary challenges.

Abstract

The challenges resulting from the health sector represented a non-traditional threat to state security. The Corona epidemic and other epidemics like Ebola, bird flu, swine fever, and other infectious or transmissible diseases before it revealed weakness in the organizational structures of the health sector and a decline in interest in health security to the detriment of other security aspects, especially military security. Military Security has witnessed remarkable development and the spending of huge sums of money in order to consolidate and develop it over the past years, and to the need to give health security the required attention as one of the forms of human security. The latter is no longer limited to the concept of traditional security or military security, but has expanded to include other dimensions, directing spending on health structures and intensifying Efforts to create shields capable of countering them, providing protection for individuals, and ensuring their right to protect public health.
The growing awareness of the great importance of health security, the inability of traditional defenses to provide treatments and prevent the spread of epidemics and diseases, as well as the reflection of the implications of health security on other forms of security, especially the political and economic ones, and what global health indicators have all provoked us to examine the reality of the duty of public administrations to achieve health security in light of these challenges, their means and their limits.

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Published

2025-01-20

How to Cite

The duty of the administration to achieve health security In light of contemporary challenges a comparative study. (2025). Journal of Juridical and Political Science, 9(3), 577-628. https://doi.org/10.55716/