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Political Economy of COVID-19: Understanding the Dynamics of a Global Pandemic, provides a theoretical, conceptual and methodological approach to the understanding of the pandemic through multiple case analyses. It produces and discusses COVID-19 research with interdisciplinary perspectives by addressing how the pandemic distinctly impacted the local and global economy and how numerous stakeholders responded. The book is truly global and interdisciplinary, through chapter contributions and case analysis from practitioners and emerging and established scholars. The ideas raised in this book have the potential to take central elements of post-pandemic political, social and economic thinking to a new line of inquiry and provide more compelling nuances. The book will be essential reading for researchers, students and scholars interested in development studies, political economy, historicity of the pandemic, conspiratorial debates and country specific policy response.
Published | Apr 09 2025 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 284 |
ISBN | 9781666972443 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Illustrations | 20 Tables |
Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
The Political Economy of COVID-19: Understanding the Dynamics of a Global Pandemic brilliantly uncovers the challenges which the exigencies and contingencies of the COVID-19 pandemic posed to national, international, and global political and economic institutions. It explores the ways policy, politics, and governance combined to deal with economic and social problems in a time of a unique emergency. A welcome addition to the political economy paradigm, national, international, and global studies.
Chikwendu Christian Ukaegbu, professor of sociology & global studies (Ret.) Adjunct Faculty, University of Wyoming & Dominican University
Drawing upon systematic and regional case studies the authors provide new insights to the impacts of COVID-19 on the global economy. They offer a multidisciplinary political economy lens with which to view interactions between political and economic forces in the evolution of a post-pandemic world. Wide-ranging in its scope, the book draws together disparate COVID-related concerns broadly examining the ways policy, politics and governance are linked to economic outcomes. In charting the widely varied attempts to deal with the pandemic worldwide, the book identifies some commonalities as well as divergent outcomes and impacts. Several recurrent themes appear in its ten individual studies, notably societal vulnerability, the nature of post-pandemic recovery, and the challenges facing the post-pandemic world. With twelve of the fifteen contributors coming from Africa, the African experience is prominent in the analyses, helping to confer a distinctive flavour to the content. This is a valuable contribution to COVID studies with important lessons for policy-makers and institutions as well as scholars attempting to understand the emerging new political economy of the global order.
Guy M. Robinson, University of Adelaide/University of Cambridge
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