Article
French
ID: <
10670/1.uymwi3>
Abstract
Summary: A financial instrument created to mobilise, manage and distribute funds dedicated to the fight against AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, the Global Fund is an excellent example of the recent reconfiguration of the international health system and the emergence of international “public-private partnerships” since the end of the twentieth century. What place do private sector actors actually occupy within the organisation, and to what extent does this involvement change or not the functioning of the Global Fund? This article first describes and analyses the role played by private actors in the Global Fund, from the definition of institutional strategies to the monitoring of the proper implementation of grants. The second part of the text deals with the process of ownership by the Global Fund of private sector logics and methods in setting up its own tools and working methods.