Navigating the New Field of International Health Law, Featuring Gian Luca Burci, Legal Counsel for WHO
Filed under: Global Health Care, Health Law, Public Health
This lecture, “Navigating the New Field of International Health Law,” will explore the intersection of health and international law and the emergence of International Health Law as a practice area. Featuring Gian Luca Burci, Legal Counsel for the World Health Organization, this program will focus on the growing interactions between health policy and various areas of international law, including international business transactions, intellectual property, international security, and human rights law. The program is sponsored by the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy and the International Law program at Seton Hall Law.
The event will take place at Seton Hall Law, Newark, NJ, on Wednesday, February 22, 6 to 7 p.m. There is no charge. 1 New Jersey CLE credit will be available. Click here to make your reservation or for more information, please contact Sara Simon, Director, Healthcare Compliance Certification Program, at sara.simon@shu.edu or call 973-642-8190.
Former UN Special Rapporteur Paul Hunt on International Law & Health as a Human Right & the Human Rights Responsibilities of Pharmaceutical Companies

Professor Paul Hunt. Photo by Sean Sime Photography
During his week-long visit to Seton Hall Law School, Paul Hunt, Professor of Law, University of Essex School of Law, provided several lectures to students and faculty on international human rights law and health law. These guest lectures included “Health as a Human Right” in Professor Elizabeth Defeis’ International Law class; “On Human Rights Guidelines for Pharmaceutical Companies” in Professor Kathleen Boozang’s Pharmaceutical and Medical Device Marketing and Compliance Class; a faculty colloquium on “GlaxoSmithKline and the Human Right to Healthcare;” and participation in classroom discussion of human rights issues raised by hospitals’ repatriation of indigent aliens in Professor Lori Nessel’s Immigration & Human Rights Clinic.
In his public presentation, “The Human Rights Responsibilities of Pharmaceutical Companies,” Professor Hunt argued that pharmaceutical companies have certain social/human rights responsibilities, including the duty to take reasonable steps to enhance equitable access to medicines. You can find an audio recording of this presentation below as well as copies of Professor Hunt’s Reports to the UN General Assembly regarding “the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health,” and “the responsibilities of pharmaceutical companies, including innovator, generic and biotechnology companies, with regard to the right to health in relation to access to medicines.”
Professor Hunt practiced as a litigation solicitor in London before specializing in international and domestic human rights law. He has undertaken human rights work in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and the South Pacific. From 2002-2008, he served as a UN Special Rapporteur on the right to the highest attainable standard of health, and in 2008, was awarded Honorary Doctorate by the Nordic School of Public Health. He is a member of the Human Rights Centre at Essex University and Adjunct Professor at Waikato University, New Zealand.
Professor Hunt’s lecture can be streamed to your browser by clicking on the link below. Clicking on this link will also provide you with a link to download the mp3. Click here to listen to Paul Hunt’s Lecture
The two UN reports mentioned by Mr. Hunt can be accessed by clicking on the thumbnails or captions below:
![]() |
![]() |
| UN Report on Right to Health | UN Report on GlaxoSmithKline |
Seton Hall Announces Summer Study Abroad International Health Law Program
Filed under: Health Law, Health Policy Community
Seton Hall University School of Law’s Leuven-Geneva Program in Health, Intellectual Property and International Law combines a broad-based introduction to the laws, policies and institutions of the European Union (EU) with a unique, interdisciplinary examination of cutting-edge issues in intellectual property, pharmaceutical development and global public health.
The Program will consist of two courses. European Union Law, a two-credit course, will be taught mainly at the Leuven Institute in Leuven, Belgium and will include a special trip to Luxembourg to visit the European Court of Justice. Students will also visit some of the main EU institutions in Brussels, such as the European Parliament and Commission.
The goal of this part of the Program is to introduce students to the essential principles and institutions of the EU and to explore firsthand the challenges facing this unique confederation of different languages and cultures. For the Geneva component of the Program, students will study Health and Intellectual Property Law in a Global Environment, a four-credit course, co-taught by one intellectual property law professor and one health law professor. The course will be conducted in collaboration with Geneva-based international organizations involved in health and intellectual property law issues, including the World Health Organization, UNAIDS, the World Trade Organization and the World Intellectual Property Organization.
Students will work on a series of case studies related to the work of these organizations, both in the classroom and in on-site meetings with organizational representatives. In addition to students from the Seton Hall Program, the Geneva component of the Program will also be open to students from the University of Zurich Ph.D. program in Biomedical Ethics and Law.
More information about the program is available here: http://law.shu.edu/Students/academics/studyabroad/Geneva/index.cfm





Posts from Health Reform Watch have been cited by media sources throughout the country, including The New York Times, Washington Post, L.A. Times, Kaiser Health News, The Health Care Blog, NPR's Planet Money Blog, Duke Univ. Med. Center News, American Health Line Alerts, BusinessWeek.com, Concurring Opinions, Balkinization, The New England Journal of Medicine, Harvard's Nieman Foundation for Journalism, Las Vegas Sun, Maggie Mahar, Ezra Klein, Tom Geoghegan, and the official homepage of the Office of the Democratic Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Steny Hoyer.