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Could the pandemic reshape world order, American security, and national defense?
The COVID-19 pandemic seems at once to be top of mind for international
relations scholars while low on their list of enduring drivers. As economists
and public health experts tally the virus’s accumulating effects, ...
A “good enough” world order a gardener’s manual
We stand at an extraordinary and challenging moment in world history. The
twin, interrelated crises of COVID-19 and the breakdown of economic globalization have demonstrated both the weakness of current “world order” (or ...
Take It off-site world order and international institutions after COVID-19
COVID-19 changes everything, we are told. We know, almost certainly, that
it does not. COVID-19 is an accelerator of global changes that were already under way, much more than it is a generator of sharp shifts in ...
No food security, no world order
While food insecurity and malnutrition remain significant challenges,
over the last two decades,
the global hunger rate decreased 25%.1 Much
of that decline is attributed to decreases in poverty. In the last 30 years, ...
COVID-19 and world order
The coronavirus crisis was a shock, but should not have been a surprise. Public
health experts had been warning about the dangers of viral pandemics for
years. SARS, H1N1, Ebola, and MERS had highlighted the risks of ...