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COVID-19 crisis and the world (re-)order

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posted on 2022-12-04, 22:46 authored by Max KellyMax Kelly, Viktor Jakupec, Michael Depercy
This chapter examines the key themes emerging from the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on the world order. Disruption has occurred at multiple levels, impacting many of the formal and informal institutions that order human life, ranging from ‘social distancing’ to challenging norms around working from home, to outright defiance of the expertise of international institutions such as the World Health Organization. Before the global financial crisis (GFC) of 2008, the rules-based world order founded at Bretton Woods appeared, symbolically at least, to have reached maturity with Vietnam, the last bastion of the communist economic system, joining the World Trade Organisation in 2007. But the period from the GFC to the COVID-19 pandemic witnessed a surge in nationalism and illiberal democracy, amid challenges to globalisation and the re-emergence of protectionism in the United States and the United Kingdom, creating a strategic vacuum that was soon filled by the (re)emerging powers of China and Russia. The pandemic is a catalyst for change. Foreign aid and development have been side-lined by many Western nations struggling with the social and economic consequences of the pandemic, enabling China and Russia to exert their ‘soft power’ in areas previously inaccessible. Global development is in a state of crisis with gains made under pre-COVID conditions in poverty, health, education, and many other areas now lost. The concluding discussion focuses on how foreign aid is deeply challenged by pandemic-related drivers of political self-interest within the context of a rapidly changing global governance and world order.

History

Chapter number

18

Pagination

0-0

ISBN-13

9781032227115

Extent

18

Editor/Contributor(s)

Depercy M

Publisher

Routledge

Place of publication

Abingdon

Title of book

COVID-19 and Foreign Aid Nationalism and Global Development in a New World Order

Series

Rethinking Development

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