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As COVID-19 unfolds as a global pandemic of unprecedented reach and proportions, one thing that is clear is that it is reinforcing inequality. Not only are low income and marginalized populations more exposed to risks, but the pandemic is likely to entrench inequalities within and between countries. The institutions of 21st century neoliberal capitalism are ill equipped to protect the vulnerable, promote public interest, and prioritize health over commercial profits. Global Pandemics in an Unequal World Webinar Series seeks to ask: what are the public policies, civil society action, social movements, norms and values, and discourses we need – local, national, and global – to combat inequalities and promote a more egalitarian and sustainable pandemic response?
The first webinar in the Global Pandemics in an Unequal World webinar series.
As COVID-19 unfolds as a global pandemic of unprecedented reach and proportions, one thing that is clear is that it is reinforcing inequality. SGPIA Prof. Sakiko Fukuda-Parr is joined by Winnie Biyanyima, Mandeep Dhaliwal, Nicoletta Dentico, Manjari Mahajan, James Parrott.
The second webinar in the Global Pandemics in an Unequal world series.
When a safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine is developed, will it be a “peoples vaccine” produced in time and scale, affordably priced, and available for all countries and all people? SGPIA Prof. Sakiko Fukuda-Parr is joined by Mariângela Simão, Celso Amorim, Ellen t’Hoen, Achal Prabhala, and Elen Høeg.
The third installment in the Global Pandemics in an Unequal World Webinar Series.
The COVID-19 pandemic has seen the expanded use of new digital technologies such as contact tracing apps and localization data used to model and monitor the pandemic. Their use by both authoritarian and democratic governments can invoke images of dystopian “Big Brother” digital surveillance - as well as utopian hopes the technology will help curb the pandemic and allow us to return to normal.
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