Global Strategy Lab, Dahdaleh Institute for Global Health Research, Faculty of Health and Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, Toronto, Canada.
Department of Politics, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies, York University, Toronto, Canada.
Glob Public Health. 2021 Jan;16(1):60-74. doi: 10.1080/17441692.2020.1788623. Epub 2020 Jul 4.
In 2015, 196 countries boldly committed to address global antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Now, five years later, progress reports suggest the implementation of AMR activities is vastly below what was initially promised. The challenge of overcoming the 'commitment-compliance gap' is not unique to AMR and is common in other areas of international politics. Global health policymakers can therefore learn from theories of international relations and experience in other sectors. We reviewed international relations scholarship to generate five hypotheses for why states might comply or not comply with their global commitments. We then conducted a public policy analysis of three past international agreements on biological diversity, climate change, and nuclear weapons to test these hypotheses and identify lessons for encouraging country compliance with global health agreements, with specific application to global AMR policies To bridge the commitment-compliance gap, international leaders should: (1) frame incentives to maximise interests for action; (2) pursue enforcement mechanisms to induce state behaviour; (3) emphasise building a culture of trust by providing mutual assurance for action; (4) include mechanisms for managing poor performers; and (5) find opportunities for continual social learning. Agreements should be designed with flexibility, data sharing, and dispute settlement mechanisms and provide financial and technical assistance to states with less capacity to deliver.
2015 年,196 个国家大胆承诺应对全球抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)。如今,五年过去了,进展报告表明,抗菌药物耐药性相关活动的实施情况远低于最初的承诺。克服“承诺-遵守差距”的挑战并非 AMR 所独有,在国际政治的其他领域也很常见。全球卫生政策制定者因此可以借鉴国际关系理论和其他部门的经验。我们回顾了国际关系学术研究,提出了五个假设,以解释各国为何遵守或不遵守其全球承诺。然后,我们对过去关于生物多样性、气候变化和核武器的三项国际协议进行了公共政策分析,以检验这些假设,并确定鼓励各国遵守全球卫生协议的经验教训,特别是针对全球 AMR 政策。为了弥合承诺-遵守差距,国际领导人应该:(1)构建激励措施,使行动利益最大化;(2)采取执行机制,促使各国采取行动;(3)强调通过提供行动互信来建立信任文化;(4)纳入管理绩效不佳者的机制;(5)寻找持续学习的机会。协议的设计应具有灵活性、数据共享和争端解决机制,并向履约能力较弱的国家提供财政和技术援助。