Pandemic Discourses

A Pandemic Letter from Tokyo

|2021-02-22T16:35:41-05:00November 3rd, 2020

The relative success of Japan in containing COVID-19 reveals gaps in the common narratives about ways to control the spread of the virus, writes Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, Director of the Julien J. Studley Graduate Programs in International Affairs and Professor of International Affairs at The New School.

A Tale of Two Epidemics: Mumbai, Bubonic Plague and COVID-19

|2021-02-22T16:38:14-05:00October 22nd, 2020

Prashant Kidambi, Associate Professor in Colonial Urban History at the University of Leicester, on the continuities and disjunctions between responses to the 1896 bubonic plague and COVID-19 in Mumbai, India.

China: Globalization and “Middle Politics” After COVID-19

|2020-10-15T19:20:44-04:00October 10th, 2020

Min Ye, Associate Professor of International Relations at Boston University, unpacks what the policy discourse of Chinese analysts and opinion leaders says about the trajectory of post-pandemic globalization in China.

Where Is the Risk in the COVID Economy?

|2020-09-25T12:28:06-04:00September 23rd, 2020

The pandemic has not been a crisis that has brought finance to a standstill. To the contrary, it has opened up new opportunities for the extension and intensification of certain financial practices, write Janet Roitman and Andrew Moon of The New School

COVID-19 and Challenges to Teacher Education in Rural Ghana

|2020-09-14T10:16:23-04:00September 12th, 2020

The coronavirus shutdown in Ghana exposes the weaknesses and inequities in the country’s education system, writes Wunpini Fatimata Mohammed, Assistant Professor of Global Media Industries, University of Georgia.

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