1 Three Approaches to Global Health Care Justice: Rejecting the Positive/Negative Rights Distinction 1 Peter West-Oram Please Note: This is the Accepted Manuscript version of a chapter published in International Development and Human Aid: Principles, Norms and Institutions for the Global Sphere (pp.108-126), edited by Paulo Barcelos and Gabriele De Angelis, and published by Edinburgh University Press. The final version of this chapter is available in that book, here: https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-international- development-and-human-aid.html. 1. Introduction There are two questions that we need to answer when embarking on a discussion of global duties to aid. Firstly, “What do we need to do to discharge our obligations to people in other countries?”, which is a question about what needs to be done as much as it is about what duties we actually have. The second, and more philosophically interesting, question is “Why do we have these obligations?”. This relates to the reasons we have such duties and the justifications that exist for our global duties to aid. This is a prior question because the way in which we answer it will affect the way that we can answer the first question posed. Without an adequate definition of the reasons for our duties, we will struggle to provide a comprehensive description of what those duties are. In this paper I focus on three cosmopolitan approaches to answering this second question in the context of global health care justice: Pogge’s negative duties based approach (Pogge 2008: 15), Brock’s minimal needs view (Brock 2009: 54-5), and Henry Shue’s model of basic rights (Shue 1980: 18). While these approaches share a common focus on attempting to justify the existence of global duties to aid, held by the wealthy and owed to the global poor, each offers a distinct interpretation of why such duties exist and suggests a range of options for fulfilling them. Importantly, while I argue that Shue’s approach to our global duties is the most effective of the three, I consider they all offer important insight brought to you by CORE View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk provided by Sussex Research Online