National AIDS Commission
The National AIDS Commission (CONASIDA) was created as the highest body, manager and inter-institutional coordinator for the formulation, approval, and validation of national policies on education, prevention, treatment, control, information, research and any other topic related to HIV/AIDS. It is also responsible for surveilling, monitoring and disseminating inter-agency HIV/AIDS programs. The Commission is composed of representatives of the state secretariats in the health, education, labor, social security and security offices; as well as representatives of the churches, the Honduran council of private enterprise, representatives of the network of non-governmental organizations to fight AIDS and representatives of people living with HIV/AIDS. The decisions taken by the Commission are binding for the process of formulating and approving national policies on issues related to HIV/AIDS.
Institutional design
Formalization: is the innovation embedded in the constitution or legislation, in an administrative act, or not formalized at all?
Frequency: how often does the innovation take place: only once, sporadically, or is it permanent or regular?
Mode of Selection of Participants: is the innovation open to all participants, access is restricted to some kind of condition, or both methods apply?
Type of participants: those who participate are individual citizens, civil society organizations, private stakeholders or a combination of those?
Decisiveness: does the innovation takes binding, non-binding or no decision at all?
Co-governance: is there involvement of the government in the process or not?
- Formalization
- embedded in the constitution/legislation
- Frequency
- regular
- Mode of selection of participants
- restricted
- Type of participants
- citizens civil society
- Decisiveness
- democratic innovation yields a binding decision
- Co-Governance
- yes
Means
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Ends
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