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Event
Representation for participatory processes
Image/s
Date (Start/End)
4 March - 1 April, 2020 - 10:00 - 17:00 (CET)
Event type
Global

 

 

Webinar series: Social participation for Universal Health Coverage

WHO, the Health System Governance Collaborative, Health Systems Global, UHC2030, the Civil Society Engagement Mechanism (CSEM) of UHC2030 and the UHC Partnership are co-hosting a webinar series around the development of a WHO guidance document, the handbook on social participation for universal health coverage.

 

Stay tuned.
  1. Population engagement and decision making (4 March 2020 at 10:00 CET)
  2. Representation for participatory processes (18 March 2020 at 16:00 CET)
  3. Legal frameworks for participation (25 March 2020)
  4. Necessary capacities for mutually beneficial government engagement with populations, communities and civil society (1 April 2020)

 

Link to the webinar: 

Webinar – Social participation for universal health coverage: Part 2 – Representation for participatory processes

 

Background

WHO, the Health System Governance Collaborative, Health Systems Global, UHC2030, the Civil Society Engagement Mechanism (CSEM) of UHC2030 and the UHC Partnership are co-hosting a webinar series around the development of a WHO guidance document, the handbook on social participation for universal health coverage. The handbook will provide best practice guidance to policymakers on how to effectively and meaningfully engage with populations, communities and civil society in national policy, planning and review processes.

The second session of the series looked into representation for participatory processes:

How to ensure the ‘right’ representatives are at the table? How to ensure that the form and design of deliberations are set up as so that participants have the possibilities to legitimately represent their constituency?

This segment aims to provoke policy-makers to reflect on the central issues linked to (a) recruiting representatives and (b) ensuring that the participatory process lends participants the maximum level of legitimacy and credibility to represent the voice of the target public(s) of the participatory process.

The team synthesized available peer reviewed literature and findings from nine country case studies across the world. A consultation on the handbook content is currently open and we encourage all interested parties to take part.

 

Recorded Event:

The recording of this session can be found below: