In recent decades, Brazil's borders with other South American countries have been associated with a negative agenda. Public intervention has aimed almost exclusively at guaranteeing national security through a variety of restrictions. In the current century, with a slow but steady shift in the geopolitical paradigm, integration among South American nations has become a priority. Border regions have now become a strategic area for South American integration and appear as such on the member countries' development agendas. Within this new context, the current study aims to contribute to the connection between the regional health and development agendas, with a focus on border regions, taking a dual approach, by analyzing the development agenda vis-à-vis the field of health and providing clues on how health actions can contribute to a more general perspective of development and integration.
Border Areas; Regional Development; Health Systems