Assistant Lecturer, University of Warwick
Sharifah's research focuses on the intersection of global health law with international law. Her current research focuses on how we can achieve global health as a public good through international institutions and human rights. She is currently examining numerous new global health organisations such as UNAIDS, The Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, UNITAID and the Global Alliance on Vaccines and Immunisations. She is also interested in the way in which these organisations interact with more traditional ones like the World Health Organisation and the World Bank. Sharifah also works with the Global Priorities Research Programme on Global Governance, where she explores non-traditional forms of regulation in global health governance. Her forthcoming monograph with Cambridge University Press entitled, 'Soft Law and Global Health Problems: Lessons from responses to HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis,' is due to be published in 2016.
Sharifah is currently a Research Post-Doctoral Fellow in the School of Law. She will be taking up an Assistant Professor post in the department in September 2016. She holds a D.Phil. in Law (Warwick, 2012), an LLM in Public International Law (Distinction in research, Nottingham 2006), LLB Honours Makerere University, Uganda (2004). Previously, Sharifah has worked in several organisations including the International Bar Association in London where she worked for the Human Rights Centre as well as practicing as an advocate in the Ugandan law firm Sebalu and Lule. She was called to the Ugandan Bar in 2005.
Oct 05, 2016 13:19 pm UTC| Insights & Views Health
World leaders have committed US$790m to fighting superbugs. These are infectious diseases that dont respond to treatment using antibiotics an essential defence against infections after surgery. They are also essential...