Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income Countries

Background: The continued export of banned pesticides from high-income countries (HICs) to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) remains a critical yet under-addressed global health issue. These hazardous chemicals are legally shipped to nations with weaker regulatory frameworks. As a result, wo...

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Published in:GHMJ (Global Health Management Journal)
Main Authors: Steven Shin, Haejin Jung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Yayasan Aliansi Cendekiawan Indonesia Thailand 2025-10-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://publications.inschool.id/index.php/ghmj/article/view/1263
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author Steven Shin
Haejin Jung
author_facet Steven Shin
Haejin Jung
author_sort Steven Shin
collection DOAJ
container_title GHMJ (Global Health Management Journal)
description Background: The continued export of banned pesticides from high-income countries (HICs) to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) remains a critical yet under-addressed global health issue. These hazardous chemicals are legally shipped to nations with weaker regulatory frameworks. As a result, workers and communities in LMICs face disproportionate exposure to toxic substances that contribute to acute poisoning, developmental disorders, and chronic disease. Aims: This paper examines the international trade of banned pesticides through view of global health equity and frames these practices as a form of structural violence that endangers LMIC populations and violates the right to health. Methods: This qualitative study uses document and policy analysis of international trade records, legal frameworks, and public health literature. It outlines the legal mechanisms and policy gaps, such as the weaknesses of the Rotterdam Convention and the permissiveness of export laws in the EU, U.S., and Switzerland that enable the ongoing flow of hazardous substances. Results: Pulling on case studies, epidemiological evidence, and international human rights frameworks, the paper investigates the health impacts of pesticide exposure and highlights the ethical failures related to current trade practices. Conclusion: Our synthesis foregrounds the research gap and advances a rights-based, structural-violence framing that clarifies the policy mandate. We suggest aligning export bans with domestic prohibitions, strengthening Rotterdam prior-informed-consent and enforcement, and financing transitions to IPM, biopesticides, and agroecology in LMIC supply chains.
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spelling doaj-art-b8035e083a0f4bfbbc679c5e5987fe3d2025-10-08T02:33:06ZengYayasan Aliansi Cendekiawan Indonesia ThailandGHMJ (Global Health Management Journal)2580-92962025-10-018310.35898/ghmj-831263Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income CountriesSteven Shin0https://orcid.org/0009-0001-9340-4690Haejin Jung1https://orcid.org/0009-0008-0801-4868Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin, US, 53706.College of Nursing, Sungshin Women’s University, Seoul, Republic of Korea, 02844. Background: The continued export of banned pesticides from high-income countries (HICs) to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) remains a critical yet under-addressed global health issue. These hazardous chemicals are legally shipped to nations with weaker regulatory frameworks. As a result, workers and communities in LMICs face disproportionate exposure to toxic substances that contribute to acute poisoning, developmental disorders, and chronic disease. Aims: This paper examines the international trade of banned pesticides through view of global health equity and frames these practices as a form of structural violence that endangers LMIC populations and violates the right to health. Methods: This qualitative study uses document and policy analysis of international trade records, legal frameworks, and public health literature. It outlines the legal mechanisms and policy gaps, such as the weaknesses of the Rotterdam Convention and the permissiveness of export laws in the EU, U.S., and Switzerland that enable the ongoing flow of hazardous substances. Results: Pulling on case studies, epidemiological evidence, and international human rights frameworks, the paper investigates the health impacts of pesticide exposure and highlights the ethical failures related to current trade practices. Conclusion: Our synthesis foregrounds the research gap and advances a rights-based, structural-violence framing that clarifies the policy mandate. We suggest aligning export bans with domestic prohibitions, strengthening Rotterdam prior-informed-consent and enforcement, and financing transitions to IPM, biopesticides, and agroecology in LMIC supply chains. http://publications.inschool.id/index.php/ghmj/article/view/1263Banned pesticidesExport regulationLMICsStructural violenceRotterdam Convention
spellingShingle Steven Shin
Haejin Jung
Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Banned pesticides
Export regulation
LMICs
Structural violence
Rotterdam Convention
title Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income Countries
title_full Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income Countries
title_fullStr Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income Countries
title_full_unstemmed Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income Countries
title_short Toxic Inequities: The Global Health Burden of Pesticide Exports to Low- and Middle-Income Countries
title_sort toxic inequities the global health burden of pesticide exports to low and middle income countries
topic Banned pesticides
Export regulation
LMICs
Structural violence
Rotterdam Convention
url http://publications.inschool.id/index.php/ghmj/article/view/1263
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