About

The What Works Working Group was brought together under the auspices of the Center for Global Development's Global Health Policy Research Network, with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Fifteen experts in international health, development economics, public policy, and other fields participated as members of the working group. Their efforts were supported through a close working relationship with the Disease Control Priorities Project in Developing Countries Project of the Fogarty International Center of the US National Institutes of Health, which has recruited many of the world's leading authorities to prepare state-of-the-art papers on specific health conditions and dimensions of health systems.

The Working Group followed a series of steps to select the cases represented in this book:

Members of the What Works Working Group

Ruth Levine, Chair, Center for Global Development Ruth Levine is Senior Fellow and Director of Programs at the Center for Global Development (CGD) and head of CGD's Global Health Policy Research Network. An expert on health and education, she was previously a Senior Economist at the World Bank and Social Sectors Advisor at the Inter-American Development Bank. She has worked in 14 developing countries and on global programs such as the Global Alliance on Vaccines and Immunization. Ms. Levine holds a doctoral degree in economics and public health from Johns Hopkins University and is coauthor of The Health of Women in Latin America and the Caribbean.

George Alleyne, Pan American Health Organization (retired) A native of Barbados, George Alleyne joined the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO) in 1981 as chief of Research Promotion and Coordination. From 1995 to 2003 he served as Director of PAHO. In 1990, Dr. Alleyne was made Knight Bachelor by Queen Elizabeth II for his services to medicine and, in 2001; he was awarded the Order of the Caribbean Community. Sir George Alleyne was appointed by the UN Secretary-General in February 2003 to serve as his Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean Region. In July 2003, the Caribbean Community (Caricom) appointed Dr. Alleyne as the head of a new commission to examine health issues confronting the region, including HIV/AIDS, and their impact on national economies. In October 2003, he was appointed Chancellor of the University of the West Indies.

Scott Barrett, Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University Scott Barrett is professor of international political economy at the Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University. He has published widely on the strategy of negotiating international environmental agreements, including the book, Environment and Statecraft: the Strategy of Environmental Treaty-Making. In addition, Professor Barrett has advised a number of international and other organizations, including the European Commission, the Global Environment Facility, the OECD, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the IUCN Commission on Environmental Law, various agencies of the United Nations, the World Bank, and the World Commission on the Oceans.

Mariam Claeson, World Bank Mariam Claeson, is the Lead Public Health Specialist in the Health, Nutrition and Population, Human Development Network of the World Bank, where she currently manages the HNP Millennium Development Goals work program. She coauthored the health chapter of the Poverty Reduction Strategy source book. Before joining the World Bank, Dr. Claeson worked with WHO for several years as program manager for the WHO Global Program for the Control of Diarrheal Diseases (CDD). She has several years of field experience, working in developing countries, in clinical practice at the rural district level (in Tanzania, Bangladesh, Bhutan); in national program management on immunization and diarrheal disease control (Ethiopia 1984-1986); and in health sector development projects in middle- and low-income countries.

Mushtaque Chowdhury, Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee Foundation A native of Bangladesh, Mushtaque Chowdhury is the Deputy Executive Director of the Research and Evaluation Division of BRAC (formerly known as the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee) in Bangladesh. He has also played a crucial role throughout the expansive introduction or Oral Rehydration Therapy (ORT)by BRAC in Bangladesh. His work has spanned the globe by working in China, Ethiopia, Nepal, and Thailand, and he has been a regular consultant to governments in South Asia and Africa as well as multilateral organizations including UNICEF, the World Bank, and the Red Cross.

William Easterly, New York University William Easterly is a professor of economics at New York University. He spent 16 years as a research economist at the World Bank, and was a joint fellow of the Center for Global Development and the Institute for International Economics. He is the author of the acclaimed book, The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics (MIT, 2001). Easterly's areas of expertise are the determinants of long-run economic growth and the effectiveness of development assistance efforts. He has worked in many areas of the developing world, most extensively in Africa, Latin America, and Russia. Easterly is an associate editor of the Journal of Development Economics and an Editor of the Berkeley Electronics Press Journal of Economics and Growth of Developing Areas.

Dean Jamison, University of California, Los Angeles Dean Jamison is a Senior Fellow at the Fogarty International Center of the National Institutes of Health, where he is on leave from his position as a Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. Before joining the UCLA faculty in 1988, Dr. Jamison spent many years at the World Bank, where he was a senior economist in the research department, health project officer for China and for The Gambia, division chief for education policy, and division chief for population, health and nutrition. In 1992-93 he temporarily rejoined the World Bank to serve as lead author for the Bank's 1993 World Development Report, Investing in Health. In 1994 he was elected to membership in the Institute of Medicine of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.

Robert Hecht, International AIDS Vaccine Initiative Robert Hecht is currently Senior Vice President of Public Policy at the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI). Hecht has had a 20-year tenure at the World Bank, most recently serving as Manager and Acting Director of the Bank's central unit for Health, Nutrition, and Population, responsible for global strategies, knowledge, technical services and partnerships. His other positions at the Bank included Chief of Operations for the World Bank's Human Development Network, Principal Economist in the Latin America region and one of the authors of the 1993 World Development Report, "Investing in Health." From 1998 to 2001, Hecht served as an Associate Director of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).

Carol Medlin, University of California - San Francisco Carol Medlin is a faculty member at the Institute for Global Health at the University of California, San Francisco. Her current work focuses on the evaluation and assessment of a variety of global health initiatives and international health projects. At the request of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, she leads a team conducting an evaluation of a Rotary-sponsored malaria control project in Vanuatu. She is a contributing author to the second edition of the OUP volume on Disease Control Priorities in developing countries and she co-authored the final report of the external review of Roll Back Malaria (RBM), an international partnership dedicated to malaria control. Between 2000 and 2002, she served as Project Director of Working Group 2 of the Commission on Macroeconomics and Health.

Anthony Measham, World Bank (retired) Anthony Measham has spent more than thirty years working on maternal and child health, family planning and nutrition in developing countries. Dr. Measham worked at the Population Council in the Latin American region and subsequently at the Ford Foundation in Dhaka as Program Officer and Project Specialist in Population, Community Health and Nutrition. He joined the World Bank in Washington, D.C. in 1982, and during his tenure worked in 25 developing countries. He has published more than seventy monographs, book chapters, and scientific articles. Since his formal retirement in 1999, Dr. Measham has continued to work for the World Bank as a consultant on immunization, nutrition, and public health. Since late 2001, he has been co-managing editor of the Disease Control Priorities Project.

Germano Mwabu, University of Nairobi Germano Mwabu, an associate professor of economics, is chairman of the Economics Department at the University of Nairobi. He was previously a senior research fellow and project director at the World Institute for Development Economics Research in Helsinki. He is a former dean of commerce and chairman of the Economics Department at Kenyatta University. He received his Ph.D in Economics from Boston University.

Blair Sachs, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Blair Sachs is a Program Officer in the Policy and Finance team at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. She is responsible for developing and managing grants that explore and drive innovative policy and finance solutions to achieve sustainable improvements in global health outcomes. A significant portion of her work supports activities and grants of the HIV, TB, and Reproductive Health program. Previously, Blair managed health programs with CARE International in Ecuador and assisted the Juhudi Women's Association to initiate a medical dispensary in a rural ward in Tanzania.

William D. Savedoff, Social Insight William D. Savedoff is currently Senior Partner at Social Insight, an international consulting firm. Dr. Savedoff has worked extensively on questions related to improving the accessibility and quality of public services in developing countries for more than 15 years, first as an Associate Researcher at the Instituto de Pesquisa de Economia Aplicada (Rio de Janeiro) and later as an economist at the Inter-American Development Bank (Washington, DC), and the World Health Organization (Geneva). In addition to preparing, coordinating, and advising development projects in Latin America, Africa and Asia, he has published books and articles on labor markets, health, education, water, and housing.

Rajiv Shah, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Rajiv Shah is the Deputy Director for Policy & Finance for Global Health at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. He manages the program's policy and finance portfolio, helps manage the program's largest grant effort - the Vaccine Fund, and shapes overall strategy for engaging with bilateral and multilateral financial institutions. He served as the Health Care Policy Advisor on the Gore 2000 presidential campaign in Nashville, TN and on Philadelphia Mayor John Street's New Centuries Committee. He started, managed, and sold a health care consulting firm - Health Systems Analytics and co-founded Project IMPACT - an award-winning national non-profit organization.

Holly Wise, US Agency for International Development Holly Wise is a senior Foreign Service officer with the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and is the Secretariat Director for the Global Development Alliance. In over 22 years of foreign assistance work, Ms. Wise has served in Uganda, Kenya, Barbados, China, and the Philippines. In Washington she has led USAID's Office of Business Development and as USAID Chair at the Industrial College of the Armed Forces she has taught political science, environmental courses, and published research on China.

Staff

Molly Kinder (2003-2005), Center for Global Development Molly Kinder is a program assistant at the Center for Global Development. Before joining CGD, she worked with Oxfam's trade policy and advocacy team, where she researched the policy implications of the impact of US agricultural subsidies on developing countries. She conducted research projects and served as a volunteer in Kenya, Mexico, and Chile and worked with the Hispanic community as a Jesuit Volunteer in Portland,Oregon.

Jessica Gottlieb (2005-present), Center for Global Development is a Program Assistant at the Center for Global Development. She is a graduate of Yale University with a joint B.A. in Political Science and International Studies. Prior to joining the Center, Jessica worked as a program assistant at the Academy for Educational Development on international health projects and participated in health policy and advocacy efforts with the U.S. Coalition for Child Survival. She has conducted research on health systems in Mali and France.