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COVID-19 and the case for global development

Authors :
Oldekop, Johan
Horner, Rory
Hulme, David
Adhikari, Roshan
Agarwal, Bina
Alford, Matthew
Bakewell, Oliver
Banks, Nicola
Barrientos, Stephanie
Bastia, Tanja
Bebbington, Anthony J
Das, Upasak
Dimova, Ralitza
Duncombe, Richard
Enns, Charis
Fielding, David
Foster, Christopher
Foster, Timothy
Frederiksen, Tomas
Gao, Ping
Gillespie, Tom
Heeks, Richard
Hickey, Sam
Hess, Martin
Jepson, Nicholas
Karamchedu, Ambarish
Kothari, Uma
Krishnan, Aarti
Lavers, Tom
Mamman, Aminu
Mitlin, Diana
Tabrizi, Negar Monazam
Müller, Tanja
Nadvi, Khalid
Pasquali, Giovanni
Pritchard, Rose
Pruce, Kate
Rees, Chris
Renken, Jaco
Savoia, Antonio
Schindler, Seth
Surmeier, Annika
Tampubolon, Gindo
Tyce, Matthew
Unnikrishnan, Vidhya
Zhang, Yin-Fang
Publisher :
Zenodo

Abstract

COVID-19 accentuates the case for a global, rather than an international, development paradigm. The novel disease is a prime example of a development challenge for all countries, through the failure of public health as a global public good. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the falsity of any assumption that the global North has all the expertise and solutions to tackle global challenges, and has further highlighted the need for multi-directional learning and transformation in all countries towards a more sustainable and equitable world. We illustrate our argument for a global development paradigm by examining the implications of the COVID-19 pandemic across four themes: global value chains, digitalisation, debt, and climate change. We conclude that development studies must adapt to a very different context from when the field emerged in the mid-20th century.<br />Annika Surmeier receives funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement No. 799041.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dba8ae49958b8b3e3b34716a7134d412