Antibiotic Resistance as Foreign Policy: U.S. Leadership in the Fight Against AMR
This policy brief addresses the urgent global threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), a growing public health crisis exacerbated by the misuse of antibiotics in human medicine, agriculture, and pharmaceutical manufacturing.
Inquiry-driven, this project may reflect personal views, aiming to enrich problem-related discourse.
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Bayley Dickinson
2025 Spring Fellow
Bayley Dickinson is a Sociology major at Hamilton College with interests in public health, social equity, and disaster preparedness. Her academic and professional work focuses on how structural inequalities—particularly those related to housing, health systems, and emergency response—affect vulnerable populations. As a researcher with the NHERI-CONVERGE initiative at the University of Colorado Boulder, she co-developed a national training module on homelessness and disaster vulnerability. Bayley has also worked in local government and policy research, applying qualitative and quantitative methods to support community-informed solutions. Her capstone explores global policy responses to antimicrobial resistance (AMR), with an emphasis on ethical governance and cross-sectoral collaboration. She is committed to translating research into actionable policy.