摘要:New understandings of global health justice will be necessary to reform global healthgovernance in facing future challenges. In responding to the unprecedented global healthchallenges of COVID-19, a pandemic requiring collective action to address a commonthreat, institutions of global health governance have faltered in their repeated efforts tounite nations in global solidarity. In the absence of intergovernmental leadership, thisera of global health is reliant upon a proliferating set of non-state actors and unsteadysupport from foreign financial aid, neoliberal trade agreements, and public-privatepartnerships, leading to increasing fragmentation among actors, undue political influencefor donors, and rising inequities within and between nations. Our world’s increasinginterconnectedness has revealed the pitfalls of the current global health governanceframework, requiring global health actors to ask questions anew about their moralobligations to prevent disease and promote health.