Centre for International Health


Centre for International Health at the University of Bergen was established in 1988.
Since January 2013 the Centre is part of the Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care at the Faculty of Medicine.
, Bergen, Norway.

Purpose and Overview

The Centre for International Health was established as a strategic unit for development-related research, education and leadership development on Global Health issues. The Centre for International Health has a particular obligation to initiate, co-ordinate and conduct research and capacity building of importance for the collaboration between the University of Bergen and low-income countries in the field of health.
The Centre has an extensive network of partners in low and middle income countries such as: Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal, Pakistan, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam and Zambia.

Academic Staff

Professor Bjarne Bjorvatn was the initiator and the director of the Centre from 1988. Since then the Centre has been led by the professors Gunnar Kvåle, Bernt Lindtjørn, Rune Nilsen, Knut Fylkesnes and since 1 September 2013 by professor Bente Moen.
The Centre has the following permanent professors:
Emeriti:
Among its many initiatives, the University of Bergen’s Centre for International Health also coordinates Global Challenges, one of the university’s three “cross-Faculty strategic focus areas,” which annually organizes Bergen Summer Research School, with its interdisciplinary selection of intensive, international PhD courses. The BSRS is a consortium of research institutions in the greater Bergen area, described as “a joint venture under the leadership of the University of Bergen with NHH Norwegian School of Economics, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Chr. Michelsen Institute and NORCE Norwegian Research Centre AS”. Each year, approximately 100 PhD students from around 40 countries worldwide participate in BSRS, which emphasizes interdisciplinary studies at the intersection of science and policy-making. BSRS is currently directed by anthropologist Edvard Hviding, and recent directors have included medical researcher/ethicist Ole Frithjof Norheim, anthropologist Tore Sætersdal, and geographer Terje Tvedt.