While global health prioritizes achieving health equity for all people worldwide, huge inequities in health exist and continue to grow between and within countries globally. This course aims to provide students with an understanding of global health through a geographic lens. This means examining the spatial processes and interconnections between people and places in different global regions that drive health inequities. We will draw on a range of theoretical frameworks and case studies to examine interrelated health problems that transcend national boundaries; unpack the environmental, political and social conditions at various scales that produce uneven outcomes of health and wellbeing, and critically analyze why, despite seemingly best intentions, global health initiatives often fail. We will also unpack the role of international organizations in the production of health priorities; the impact of colonial legacies and neoliberal policies on health and disease, and explore challenging ethical issues surrounding global policies, priorities and practices.