
Overview
The Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria/Transatlantic Partners Against AIDS (GBC/TPAA), in partnership with Scenario Development, are convening an innovative multi-stakeholder Scenario Building Workshop to analyze and understand the potential role and opportunities for public-private partnerships (PPP) in the fight against HIV/AIDS and TB in Russia, China and India. This will be the first workshop of its kind, which convenes the private sector, government and NGOs from Russia, China and India.
Scenarios provide a way to apply cross-sectoral knowledge to assess the possible future of AIDS and TB. Scenario building is a dialogue-based methodology which entails identifying both predictable and uncertain driving forces behind a problem in order to describe plausible futures. Scenarios can be used to look at long-term impacts and consequences of actions, explore important areas of public-private partnership and to develop concrete recommendations aimed at bringing about PPPs in countries with emerging economies.
The Scenario Workshop Process
- Convenes experts from various sectors: NGO, government, private sector, policy makers;
- Two-day facilitated event with small-group working sessions and plenary exercises aimed at sharing knowledge, identifying key issues, analyzing current realities and identifying forces shaping the future of the HIV/AIDS and TB epidemics in Russia, China and India;
- Helps participants to formulate a set of draft scenarios, challenge current assumptions and think beyond "official" or preferred futures;
- Creates a critical mass of individuals sharing a common understanding and language around the future of HIV/AIDS and TB in Russia, China and India and the possibilities for a PPP response.
- Enables an understanding of the risks and opportunities involved in an effective response to these epidemics.
The outcomes of the scenarios workshop will be presented at a session of the high-level Leaders' Forum on October 25th. This will provide an opportunity to outline collective thinking about the future of the epidemic, together with PPP responses and challenges.