The Coalition to Stop Maternal Mortality: Uganda

Citation:

McCoy, M., Namwase, A. & Finnegan, A., 2019. The Coalition to Stop Maternal Mortality: Uganda , Harvard University: Social Medicine Consortium.

Abstract:

In 2011 in response to two high profile cases of maternal death during labor and delivery, Ugandan citizens mobilized to prevent maternal mortality by improving the delivery of healthcare services in public hospitals. The Coalition to Stop Maternal Mortality ignited a social movement by utilizing strategic advocacy to hold the Government of Uganda accountable to its constitutional provisions on health service delivery. This case examines the Coalition to Stop Maternal Mortality and its landmark legal initiative, Constitutional Petition No. 16 of 2011, that focused the nation’s attention on the state of health services in Uganda and initiated a nationwide conversation about the role of government in delivering the right to health for all Ugandans.  What tactics and strategies can effectively mobilize power to bring about legal and policy change?  Would these be enough to achieve the change that the Coalition sought?

Notes:

Teaching note available for faculty/instructors.

Download free of charge

Teaching note: Available
Teaching note authors: McCoy, Melissa; Namwase, Angella; Finnegan, Amy