The US and Earth: ‘Don’t Look Up,’ ‘Armageddon,’ ‘World War Z’

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It has now been almost a decade since scholars, observers and policymakers started discussing the …

Bu Konuda Daha Fazla

  • The COVID-19 pandemic significantly affected the standing and popularity of major economies around the world. None of the top three major economies handled the pandemic well. China, as the epicenter of the pandemic and its failure to inform the world about it; the EU, as the second epicenter of the pandemic and its failure to help member countries; and the United States, as the third epicenter of the outbreak and its failure to contain the crisis, all lost credibility.

  • Scholars, analysts and experts of international relations and international political economy all agree that the coronavirus pandemic has pushed the world into one of its most significant and complicated crises since World War II.

  • Sooner or later life will return to normal, but that shouldn't mean forgetting coronavirus lessons

  • Last week this column addressed how the coronavirus can change the debates and domestic dynamics of the U.S. elections. The crisis management and leadership in handling the outbreak, the economy – in particular, unemployment rates – and the state of the health care sector in the U.S. were cited as potential issues that may arise or be amplified as a result of the pandemic.

  • The Donald Trump administration insists on offloading blame for the COVID-19 pandemic on China.