Showing posts with label multilateral Cooperation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label multilateral Cooperation. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Dec 2020-Jan 2021 Issue of EJSSS

We are happy to announce that the Dec 2020-Jan 2021 Issue of Electronic Journal of Social and Strategic Studies (EJSSS) with 06 papers on IR, Strategic Studies, Psychology and Edn & Trg, and 03 Book Reviews on IR/Education is online. We are an Open Access, refereed journal committed to promote interdisciplinary research in Social Sciences/Strategic Studies. We are also a member journal of CROSSREF. Our application for ISSN is in process.

Visit us at www.ejsss.net.in

We specifically aspire to encourage young and emerging scholars to publish their research and publication. We firmly believe that a knowledge driven society is the only hope for a promising and sustainable future that all of us hope for.
The contents of our Issue are as below:


CONTENTS

 

Articles

 

1. China and the West: Contestations in African Development and Security                       122-150

    Dr Napoleon Kurantin and Prof. Bertha Z. Osei-Hwedie

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1201

 

2. Criminal Justice Responses and Fear of Crime in the Era of COVID-19                        151-166

    Chyna N. Crawford, PhD

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1202

 

3. Multilateralism, Multipolarity and ASEAN: A Re-Appraisal                                             167-186

    Prof. Y Yagama Reddy

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1203

 

4. Procedure Established by Law, Right to Privacy                                                              187-214

    and Investigative Powers of State: An Appraisal

    Dr Rajamanickam Srinivasan

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1204

 

5. US and India: Paving the road to ensuring peace and prosperity                                   215-237

    in the Indo-Pacific region                                                                                                 

    Udita Banerjee

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1205

 

6. South China Sea: Perspectives, Challenges and India’s Options                                     238-263

    Commodore SL Deshmukh, NM (Retd)

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1206

 

Book Reviews

 

7. Digital Media and the Politics of Transformation in the Arab World and Asia              264-265

    by Carola Richter et. al. (2018)

    Dr Cserkits Michael

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1207

 

8. The Science of Agriculture: A Biological Approach (5th Ed.)                                         266-268

    by Dr. Ray V. Herren

    Dr. Wandra Arrington

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1208

 

9. Just Research in Contentious Times: Widening the Methodological Imagination          269-272

    by Michelle Fine

    Katherine Baker Johnson

    https://doi.org/10.47362/EJSSS.2020.1209


Saturday, April 18, 2020

COVID-19: Universities are filling the void in International Cooperation


COVID-19: Universities are filling the void in International Cooperation[1]

Anushka Saraswat[2]

The COVID-19 pandemic is not only a trial for health systems and public infrastructures but also a test of global cooperation and forbearance. When international organizations like the United Nations, the G20, and the G7 are struggling to carve out a role for themselves in the global response to the deadly pandemic, the global universities are fighting on the frontlines against the deadly virus. Although the universities are far below the haute politique of international relations, they are within the trough wrestling to seek out a vaccine, develop therapeutics, and expedite mass production to effectively dispense the treatments as widely and as fairly as possible.

The UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has pleaded for a unified global response as nations turn inwards and seal each other off to combat the pandemic. The silence of the Security Council has sent a signal of shambolic disunity, which is resonating quite widely. Universities, on the other hand, are charged with highly qualified teams of researchers who are working tirelessly to find a cure and mitigate the impact of COVID-19.During the time of dire straits, the scientists and scholars have become increasingly connected and interdependent, disregarding concerns such as academic credit. The universities and research centres are sharing data and collaborating across national borders in extraordinary new ways.

Doctors, engineers, scientists, researchers and university students across the world have shifted gears and are applying their skills and knowledge to fight the virus. The Serum Institute of India (SII), the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer by volume has partnered with the US-based biotech drug research company Codagenix. The two partners have been working together with the utmost diligence and meticulous efforts to develop a preventive vaccine against the novel coronavirus.

At Oxford’s Jenner Institute, one of the most reputed academic centers for vaccine research in the world, a team led by Sarah Gilbert has identified a nonreplicating viral vaccine candidate and is aiming for success in humans by June. The university has recruited volunteers with human trials already going underway. The human test is set to begin by April 22. The development of a vaccine is a glaringly slow process, however, with the support of the international community the academicians, researchers, and scientists are producing viable candidates and lab research speedily. The vaccine is being simultaneously tested in animal models by laboratories in the United States and Australia. There are plans for large scale productions in China, India, and Italy.

The team of researchers in Harvard’s Precision Vaccines Program is aiming to develop a COVID-19 vaccine for the older population. Many institutes in the U.S. such as Tufts University, Middleburg College and New York University are preparing to convert campus dormitories to temporary hospitals to provide beds for COVID-19 patients displaced from existing hospitals.

The Global Institute on Innovation Districts engaged innovation districts across the world. The institute effectively responded to what extent their research institutions, R&D labs, companies, and other actors are advancing in the development of a vaccine. The institute is focusing on the broad sector of life sciences to include all research specializations that have been tapped to address the pandemic.

The universities are also collaborating with companies and volunteers who are developing new solutions for creating and ramping the production of Personal Protection Equipment (PPE). A few universities like North Western University, University of New Hampshire and Michigan State University are developing 3-D printed face shield projects.

Manu Prakash, who is an Associate Professor of Bioengineering at Stanford University, focused largely on low-cost medical devices. In March, he returned from Europe where the pandemic was taking a toll. After returning he started an open-source project to modify full-face snorkel masks into reusable Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) for health care workers.

Pandemics like COVID-19 eventually generate opportunities for global cooperation. The United States and China should have put aside their differences and tackled the pandemic together. When the COVID-19 threatened the world and WHO stumbled, the two countries could have united for coordinating a global response to the pandemic. The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) based in the United States should have assisted China in investigating the origin and nature of the “mysterious virus” when Chinese counterparts were inordinate and required more expertise assistance in the research. As China leads in the manufacturing and exporting of active pharmaceutical ingredients, she could have cooperated with the United States to mitigate the disruption of the drug supply chain. The COVID-19 pandemic is a reflection of the incompetency of international institutions and national leaders and their governments.

Nations eschewed Multilateralism. After inequality persisted for decades, disaffected voters in numerous countries have elected populist leaders in recent years. In authoritarian positions, these leaders turned to nationalist norms and shrugged off the international responsibilities and constraints imposed by international organizations. Defeating the COVID-19 pandemic demands international cooperation on all levels, however, the reinforcement of nationalist trends makes the mechanism of delivery substantially weak.

When health organizations and institutes continue to work on solutions for the COVID-19 pandemic, the world is reminded that this type of global and real-time coordination doesn’t happen in isolation. It’s through communication networks of small geographic innovation in areas of advanced research, rapid prototyping and commercialization that success is achieved.

Many experts in the world warned of humanity’s vulnerability to a pandemic before the coronavirus outbreak. In the famous 2015 TED talk, Bill Gates highlighted the vast financial resources that are employed for nuclear deterrence instead of funding for pandemic preparedness. Contrarily, governments continued to see national security in military and warfare terms, and the production of essential pharmaceuticals was outsourced to the less expensive providers in the name of private profit and public economy. Only strong international universities and institutions can effectively respond to the deadly pandemic. It’s pertinent to exacerbate global inequities and marshal the resources required to effectively contain the future global crisis of this kind. COVID-19 will not be the last pandemic. With more robust global institutions, developed and underdeveloped countries alike can ensure that the next one is less disastrous.

Note: The article was originally published in Geopolitics Magazine on 16th April 2020. Opinions expressed are those of the Author and republished here with the permission of the Author.


[1] The article was originally published on the Geopolitics Magazine on 16th April 2020.
[2] Ms. Saraswat is pursuing her Bachelors in Global Affairs (Hons.) at the Jindal School of International Affairs, O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat, Haryana, India. She can be reached at 19jsia-anushka.s@jgu.edu.in.

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