American Journal of Public Health Research
ISSN (Print): 2327-669X ISSN (Online): 2327-6703 Website: https://www.sciepub.com/journal/ajphr Editor-in-chief: Apply for this position
Open Access
Journal Browser
Go
American Journal of Public Health Research. 2024, 12(4), 87-99
DOI: 10.12691/ajphr-12-4-4
Open AccessArticle

What are the Roles of Civic Organizations in Public Health Development? Attempting to Make Politics A Social Medicine in the Horn of Africa

Begna Fufa Dugassa1,

1Health Team, Oromo Studies Association, Laurel, U.S. A

Pub. Date: November 08, 2024

Cite this paper:
Begna Fufa Dugassa. What are the Roles of Civic Organizations in Public Health Development? Attempting to Make Politics A Social Medicine in the Horn of Africa. American Journal of Public Health Research. 2024; 12(4):87-99. doi: 10.12691/ajphr-12-4-4

Abstract

Abstract Background: The Horn of Africa (HA) deals with complex social problems worsened by climate change. Many of these issues have roots in the imperial ideology used in state formation and governance. These challenges necessitate moving away from relying solely on the state and market to solve society's welfare issues. Involving civic organizations (COs) is crucial in understanding and tackling societal problems. Methods: This paper employs historical research methods to synthesize knowledge using primary and secondary data while examining the role of community organizations in public health development and services. Findings: COs have significantly contributed to understanding the root causes of societal problems and have played pivotal roles in social reforms and public health development. They have influenced researchers, policymakers, and shaped discourses, and strived to make politics a form of social medicine. This influence is manifested in their advocacy for policies that address the root causes of societal problems and promote public health, thereby demonstrating the power and influence of these organizations. Conclusions: The prevailing evidence suggests that COs wield considerable influence over researchers and policymakers, molding societal discourse and transforming politics into social medicine. Their advocacy primarily centers on formulating policies that target societal issues' underlying root causes and fostering a robust social policy conducive to public health development. Moreover, COs have effectively provided essential services that the state and the market neglected. Flourishing COs is essential to empower individuals and groups, augmenting their ability to comprehend and effectively tackle prevalent social challenges.

Keywords:
Keywords: Civic Organizations Public Health Social Medicine Horn of Africa

Creative CommonsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

References:

[1]  Dugassa, Begna (2024), Climate Change and Violence in the Horn of Africa.” American Journal of Public Health Research, vol. 12, no. x (2024): 8-21.
 
[2]  Holcomb, B., & Ibssa, S. (1990). The Invention of Ethiopia: The Making of a Dependent Colonial State in North Africa. Trenton, NJ: The Red Sea Press, Inc.
 
[3]  Jalata, A. (2005). Oromia and Ethiopia. State Formation and Ethnonational Conflict 1868-2004. Trenton, NJ: The Red Sea Press, Inc.
 
[4]  Dugassa, Begna. (2008). Indigenous Knowledge, Colonialism and Epistemological Violence. The Experience of the Oromo People Under Abyssinian Colonial Rule, A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Department of Theory and Policy Studies in Education, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto.
 
[5]  Bulcha, Mekuria (2002) The Making of the Oromo Diaspora, A Historical Sociology of Forced Migration, Kirk House Publishers, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
 
[6]  Dugassa Begna (2021) Structural inequality (SI) and underdevelopment of public health conditions: the experiences of Oromo people in Ethiopia. HPHR. 2021; 30.
 
[7]  WHO (2008) Commission on Social Determinants of Health https:// iris.who.int/ bitstream/handle/ 10665/43943/ 9789241563703 _eng.pdf?sequence=1.
 
[8]  Tarrow, Sidney (1998) Power in Movement: Social Movements and Contentious Politics. Cambridge studies in comparative politics, Cambridge University Press.
 
[9]  Wallack, Lawrence (2019) Building a Social Justice Narrative for Public Health, Health Education and Behavior, Vol. 46 (6) pps901-904.
 
[10]  CIHR A Guide to Knowledge Synthesis, A Knowledge Synthesis Chapter, https:// cihr-irsc.gc.ca/ e/documents/ knowledge_ synthesis _chapter_e.pdf.
 
[11]  Watts, Sheldon (1997) Epidemics and History: Disease, Power and Imperialism, Yale, University Press.
 
[12]  WHO (2021) Health Promotion Glossary of Terms 2021. https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240038349.
 
[13]  Rose, George (1993) A History of Public Health, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore. Rutty.
 
[14]  PHA (2020) The 10 Essential Public Health Services, https://phaboard.org/wp-content/uploads/EPHS-English.pdf.
 
[15]  Lange, Klaus (2021) Rudolph Virchow, Poverty and Global Health: From “Politics as Medicine on a grand scale” to health in all policies, Global Health Journal Vol, 5 pp 149-154.
 
[16]  Taylor, R. and Rieger, A. (1985). ‘Medicine as Social Science: Rudolph Virchow on the Typhus Epidemic in Upper Silesia’. International Journal of Health Services, 15(4): 547-559.
 
[17]  Claybaugh, Amanda (2006). "Temperance," in American History Through Literature, 1820.
 
[18]  1870. Eds. Janet Gabler-Hover and Robert Sattlemeyer. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1152-58.
 
[19]  Mann,Karl; Derik Hermann and Andreas Heinz (2000) One Hundred Years of Alcoholism: The Twentieth Century , Alcohol and Alcoholism, Volume 35, Issue 1, January 2000, Pages 10–15.
 
[20]  Greer, Scott (2018) Labour politics as public health: how the politics of industrial relations and workplace regulation affect health, European Journal of Public Health, Volume 28, Issue suppl_3, November 2018, Pages 34–37.
 
[21]  Hahn RA, Truman BI, Williams DR (2018). Civil rights as determinants of public health and racial and ethnic health equity: Health care, education, employment, and housing in the United States. SSM Popul Health. 4: 17-24.
 
[22]  Pepin D, Weber SB (2019). Civil Rights Law and the Determinants of Health: How Some States Have Utilized Civil Rights Laws to Increase Protections Against Discrimination. J Law Med Ethics. Jun; 47(2_suppl): 76-79.
 
[23]  Byrd, Michael and Clayton, Linda (2000) An American Health Dilemma, Volume one. A Medical History of African Americans and the Problem of Race: Beginnings to 1900, Routledge, New York.
 
[24]  Dugassa, Begna (2012) Knowledge Construction: Untapped Perspective in Pursuit for Health Equity Sociology Mind Vol.2, No.4, 362-372 Published Online October 2012 in SciRes http://www.SciRP.org/journal/sm).
 
[25]  Dugassa, Begna (2015) Epistemic Freedom and Development of Better Public Health Conditions: The case of Oromia Regional State in Ethiopia, Journal of Oromo Studies, Vol. 22, No. 1& 2, p199-238.
 
[26]  Ready, T. (2001). The impact of affirmative action on medical education and the Nation’s Health, In G. Orfield, & M. Kuraender (Eds.), Diversity challenged: Evidence on the impact of affirmative action. Cambridge: Civil Rights Project.
 
[27]  Dugassa, Begna (2012B) Denial of Leadership Development and the Underdevelopment of Public Health: The Experience of the Oromo People in Ethiopia, Journal of Oromo Studies, Vol. 19, No. 1 & 2, pp139-174.
 
[28]  Berger, P. & Luckmann, T. (1966). The social construction of reality. A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge. New York.
 
[29]  Our World Data, https://ourworldindata.org/literacy, Retrieved August 23-25, 2024.
 
[30]  Scardamalia, Marlene and Bereiter, Carol (2010) A Brief History of Knowledge Building, Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology, Vol. 36 (1) 12-17.
 
[31]  Dugassa, Begna (2016) Free Media as the Social Determinants of Health: The Case of Oromia Regional State in Ethiopia, Open Journal of Preventive Medicine, 6, 65-83.
 
[32]  Edwards, Michael (ed.) (2011), The Oxford Handbook of Civil Society, Oxford Handbooks; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 May 2012).
 
[33]  Wallack Lawrence. Building a Social Justice Narrative for Public Health. Health Educ Behav. 2019 Dec; 46(6): 901-904.
 
[34]  Shryock, Richard (1931) Sylvester Graham and the Popular Health Movement, 1830-1870 The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 18, No. 2), pp. 172-183 (12 pages), Oxford University Press
 
[35]  ICRC (1996) The Fundamental Principles of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, https:// www.icrc.org/ sites/default/ files/ external/doc/en/assets/files/other/icrc_002_0513.pdf.
 
[36]  Jalata, A. (2023). Baro Tumsa’s contributions to the Oromo national movement. Social Identities, 29(1), 95–121.
 
[37]  Dugassa, Begna. (2018) Where is the Global South in the Health Discourse? Attempt Forthcoming from the Oromo People’s Perspective, American Journal of Public Health Research, Vol. 6, No. 6, 243-252.
 
[38]  Dugassa, Begna (2019) Where is the Global South in the Health Discourse? Attempt Forthcoming from the Oromo People’s Perspective, American Journal of Public Health Research, 2018, Vol. 6, No. 6, 243-252.
 
[39]  Christopher, Sullivan, Sue (2010) This is Public Health: A Canadian History, CPHA, Ottawa.