Skip to content

Story and Perspective

Language as a Tool for Large-Scale Change in Global Health

Liz Futrell

Writer Rita Mae Brown once wrote, “Language is the road map of a culture. It tells you where its people come from and where they are going.” But what if you work for a global health organization that operates in not one culture but many distinct, diverse contexts and cultures around the world?

Pathfinder International recently grappled with this question while developing a set of global language guidelines to help ensure that our publications and communications reflect our core values: respect, courage, collaboration, innovation, and integrity. Global language standards play a key role in cultivating a baseline organizational understanding of how we translate our values into words that accurately and appropriately frame and shape our work in any setting.

Pathfinder, like many international NGOs, is moving toward a country-led model that shifts power and resources away from donor countries and into the hands of those closest to the programs we implement, the partners we support, and the people we serve. We want our language—whether we are designing programs or documenting our technical areas of focus, the geographical areas in which we work, or our programmatic approaches— to drive and reflect the equitable power dynamic we are trying to achieve.

This means choosing words that reflect our mutual relationships with community members, colleagues, implementing partners, and governments. It means using inclusive words that are free of bias and that dignify and center people and not their health conditions, behaviors, socioeconomic status, or other circumstances. And it means being specific to avoid harmful generalizations, stereotypes, and othering.

But our standards simply cannot be applied uniformly in every context in which we work. A concept that feels progressive and liberating to readers in a donor country might feel oppressive and paternalistic to an audience in a formerly colonized country with a different set of perspectives, lived experiences, and values. A phrase that makes perfect sense in English might not translate well to French or Portuguese or Amharic or Bangla.

While reproductive justice organizations in the US and some other English-speaking settings increasingly avoid language that reflects a binary understanding of gender, many other languages are themselves gendered. And sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) organizations in many contexts rely on gendered terms to communicate about contraception and other SRHR topics in a manner that is culturally acceptable and resonant to their local audiences. Even within the same culture, not everyone prefers the same terms, and there is rarely a clear “right” or “wrong” answer. Therefore, with our global language guidance as their foundation, our writers and communicators around the world must tailor and adapt their language to effectively reach their specific audiences.

As we’ve rolled out our global language guidance, one of the most frequently raised questions has been, “How do we reconcile donor preferences with our own when the two differ?” For example, our global guidance recommends avoiding the term “beneficiary,” which can patronize people by describing them in terms of the support they receive, imply passive dependency rather than agency, and leave out important context about the disparity or challenge a program is working to address. But many donors have long used that term in their requests for proposals, and it is important to respond in accordance with their conventions. One answer is that, while sometimes there may not be flexibility to change the language, other times, we can seize opportunities to substitute terms that no longer reflect our values with alternatives that do, and, when needed, provide an explanation. Another answer is that, the more organizations write and speak publicly about their efforts to shift the language of global health toward that of equity and justice, and about the questions and challenges that arise from those efforts, the more likely we are to affect large-scale change in our field among both implementing organizations and donors.

Read more about our process for developing the language guidance >>

Download Pathfinder’s language guidance in EnglishFrench and Portuguese.

More Stories

Working with Woodabé communities to enhance climate resilience and improve the lives of women and girls

By Ali Adamou Harouna, Communications & External Engagement Advisor – Africa A Sahelian country in the heart of the Sahara…

Read More

Invest in Today’s Health Workforce to Help Tomorrow’s Climate Crisis

By: Crystal Lander, Pathfinder International and Caroline York, IntraHealth The effects of climate change are increasing at meteoric rates, devastating…

Read More

A Global Perspective on Local Action at GHPC 2024

At the Global Health Practitioner Conference (GHPC) 2024, Pathfinder International brought together voices from Kenya, Pakistan, and Bangladesh to explore…

Read More

Reflections from GHPC 2024: Amplifying Community Voices in Climate and Health Action

The Global Health Practitioner Conference (GHPC) 2024 served as a powerful reminder of what we at Pathfinder International have long…

Read More

Nothing About Communities Without Communities

USAID Uganda Family Planning Activity’s Localized Approach to Promoting Healthy Timing and Spacing of Pregnancies I am very grateful to…

Read More

Local Nigerien Organizations Working to Reach Women and Girls in Fragile Settings

How MOMENTUM Integrated Health Resilience reaches communities in crisis In Niger, many communities are now out of reach for international…

Read More

Wrap-Up: World Contraception Day 2024 Webinar

Young women from Burkina Faso, Jordan, Mozambique share stories of reproductive rights and choice Last week, in honor of the…

Read More

From Policy to Practice: Revolutionizing Family Planning in Uganda

USAID/Uganda Family Planning Activity Celebrates World Contraception Day 2024 As we approach World Contraception Day 2024, Uganda faces a stark…

Read More

Working Across Communities and Sectors to Protect and Uplift Young Women and Girls

How a Pathfinder program in Mozambique is working with a variety of community partners to prevent child, early, and forced…

Read More

Working with the Private Sector to Build a World Where Women and Girls Thrive

Strong partnerships are behind everything we do at Pathfinder—our work with government to strengthen health systems, with local partners to…

Read More

Reflections on Women’s Role in Crisis: Climate Change and Security

Pathfinder International recently convened the “Regional Parliamentarian Meeting on Gender Empowerment and Green Economy” in Islamabad, Pakistan. During the forum,…

Read More

Low Dose, High Frequency: How a Clinical Mentoring Program Saves Women’s Lives in Democratic Republic of the Congo

About USAID PROSANI PROSANI USAID (USAID’s Integrated Health Program) focuses on six areas of health: maternal, newborn, and child health;…

Read More