Inequality and Pandemics
At the intersection of health, climate change, and economics is a deep reality that inequality is driving today’s pandemics and making the world vulnerable to future outbreaks.
About
Inequalities are driving today’s pandemics — AIDS, COVID-19, mpox, Ebola, and beyond. Climate change and globalization are making outbreaks ever more likely, while inequalities increase vulnerability to transmission, impede access to health services, and stand in the way of people’s dignity and rights. It is a perfect storm. They are at the heart of why infections become outbreaks, outbreaks become pandemics, and pandemics become lingering global crises. While science and technology have made extreme advancements, they have proven insufficient to stop pandemics. The difference between success and failure against these infectious diseases has often come down to the effectiveness of strategies to overcome inequalities.
Our Work
Through our collaboration with UNAIDS, the Center for Global Health Policy & Politics helped launch the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS, and Pandemics, co-chaired with leading global academic, political, and community leaders addressing the inequality-pandemic cycle. With the World Health Organization, Pan American Health Organization, and other partners, we are also researching how policy drives or disrupts the inequalities causing pandemics and undermining wellbeing.
Featured Work

Think Pandemics – Think Inequalities

Ending Pandemics: US Foreign Policy to Mitigate Today’s Major
Killers, Tomorrow’s Outbreaks, and the Health Impacts of ClimateKillers, Tomorrow’s Outbreaks, and the Health Impacts of Climate
ChangeChange

Income Inequality and Pandemics: Insights From HIV/AIDS and COVID-19
Publications
See AllAnnouncements
Think Pandemics – Think Inequalities
https://www.youtube.com/live/L689XvU0frQ?si=zhGU8sJTI41H16UW In their role as a UNAIDS Collaborating Center, the Center for Global Health Policy & Politics co-organized a roundtable…
September 20, 2023
Journal Article
Matthew M. Kavanagh, Sam Halabi, Adi Radhakrishnan, Allan Maleche, Clare Wenham, Elize Massard da Fonseca, Lawrence R Helfer, Elvin Nyukuri, Attiya…
September 4, 2023
Journal Article
Vaccine politics: Law and inequality in the pandemic response to COVID-19
Matthew M. Kavanagh, Renu…
March 29, 2023