麻花传媒

麻花传媒expertise on the world stage: Dr. Rosalind Warner at CUGH Virtual Global Health Week

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screenshot of the virtual conference slide

Okanagan College Political Science professor Dr. Rosalind Warner brought a local lens to a global stage last month as a featured speaker in the Consortium of Universities for Global Health鈥檚 (CUGH) 2025 . Her presentation, part of the session 鈥淰W6: Human Security in Global Health 鈥 Governing Risk, Building Resilience,鈥 explored how rethinking security from the perspective of people rather than states can help build more resilient, equitable health systems worldwide. 

Speaking alongside colleagues from Thompson Rivers University and the University of Alberta, Dr. Warner traced the evolution of human security from its post鈥揅old War roots to its relevance in today鈥檚 era of climate stress, pandemics and geopolitical upheaval.

鈥淗uman security brought a new way of thinking that would enable an expanded understanding of what security meant, going beyond military threats to include health, environmental, economic and social risks, and even political threats from the state itself,鈥 said Dr. Warner.

Dr. Warner emphasized the shift from state鈥慶entric to people鈥慶entric security, arguing that protecting the well鈥慴eing and basic rights of individuals must sit alongside traditional notions of sovereignty. This approach, she noted, aligns closely with international health regulations, the Global Health Security Agenda, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals, all of which recognize that systemic risks鈥攕uch as pandemics and climate change鈥攁re interconnected and unequally distributed.鈥

During the session, the panel examined how geopolitical realignments, including China鈥檚 growing influence within global health institutions, are reshaping governance norms and raising new ethical and political questions. Dr. Warner pointed to recent pandemics and climate鈥慸riven disasters as evidence that global health systems must move from reactive crisis response to anticipatory, adaptive governance that can manage complex, cross鈥慴order risks.

Using examples from international legal and policy frameworks鈥攕uch as the Responsibility to Protect, the Ottawa landmine treaty, and evolving global health security mechanisms鈥攕he showed how human security thinking has already informed innovations in international law and multilateral cooperation. However, she also stressed ongoing tensions between narrow national security priorities and broader human security goals, particularly when states prioritize short鈥憈erm interests over long鈥憈erm resilience and equity. For Okanagan College, Dr. Warner鈥檚 invitation to speak at CUGH underscores the College鈥檚 growing role in conversations that connect local classrooms with global challenges. As a Continuing College Professor in the Department of Political Science, her teaching and research bridge global health governance, human security and equitable development鈥攁reas that are increasingly central to how students understand today鈥檚 global 鈥減olycrisis.鈥

Dr. Warner鈥檚 contribution to CUGH 2025 affirms that perspectives developed at Okanagan College are informing debates on how to design health systems that can anticipate and adapt to future crises while addressing the structural drivers of vulnerability. Faculty, staff and students interested in global health, climate, and security are encouraged to watch the recording and consider how a human security lens might inform their own scholarship, teaching, and community work.

Published By Stephanie Riley on January 16, 2026
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