Podcast
Episode 3: The untold story behind efforts to make life-saving HIV/AIDS drugs accessible in Africa. Love recounts his pivotal role in breaking down patent barriers and negotiating steep price reductions—transforming treatment from an unaffordable $10,000–$15,000 a year to just a few hundred dollars—thereby saving millions of lives and shaping global health policy. The conversation also explores ongoing challenges in drug pricing, regulatory barriers, and innovative alternatives to the current pharmaceutical patent system.
- Lower Drug Costs Are Just a Federal License Away. But They Require Biden Administration Leadership, Scientific American
- Time to make essential cancer drugs more affordable, Financial Times
About James Love
James Love is Director of Knowledge Ecology International. His training is in economics and finance, and work focuses on the production, management and access to knowledge resources, as well as aspects of competition policy. The current focus is on the financing of research and development, intellectual property rights, prices for and access to new drugs, vaccines and other medical technologies, as well as related topics for other knowledge goods, including data, software, other information protected by copyright or related rights, and proposals to expand the production of knowledge as a public good. James Love holds a Masters of Public Administration from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and a Masters in Public Affairs from Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.