ABSTRACT

Diplomacy, Society and the COVID-19 Challenge brings together authors from various disciplinary backgrounds to examine the impacts of the pandemic on world politics and international relations, focusing on diplomacy and national, regional, and global responses to COVID-19.

The authors adopt a critical perspective which questions the general assumption that security is only related to state security. The book’s first part deals with diplomacy and COVID-19, exploring forms such as virtual, digital, and science diplomacy. The second part, on national and regional responses to COVID-19, provides a detailed evaluation of the foreign policies of states and regional actors and the national/regional impacts of the pandemic. The third part investigates the responses of international organisations, such as NATO and the OECD, to COVID-19’s transformative and disruptive effects.

This book will be of interest to students, scholars, and researchers of international relations, diplomacy, security studies, global governance, political science, political economy, and global public health, especially those with a particular focus on COVID-19 and how it has changed the world.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

Pandemic, Security, and Other Broken Things

part II|128 pages

National and Regional Responses to COVID-19

chapter 687|12 pages

Global Health Diplomacy and Türkiye 1

chapter 8|16 pages

Government Responses to the COVID-19 Pandemic

Comparative Health Policies in the US and Canada

chapter 9|13 pages

China's Global Health Diplomacy in the Post-Pandemic Era

Implications for Southeast Asian Countries

chapter 10|12 pages

COVID-19 and South Korea

Focusing on Cultural Public Diplomacy with Hallyu

chapter 11|9 pages

ASEAN's COVID-19 Pandemic Response

Regional and Global Reflections

chapter 12|12 pages

Beyond Central Asia's Chessboard

Human Movement, Policies, and COVID-19 1

chapter 13|15 pages

The COVID-19 Pandemic and the Middle East

Changing Policies and Mindset of Regional States

chapter 14|13 pages

The UK's New Migration Policy

Post-Brexit and Post-COVID Implications

chapter 16|15 pages

South Caucasus and COVID-19

Vulnerabilities, Setbacks, Responses

part III|97 pages

Global Responses to COVID-19

chapter 21|14 pages

The African Union and COVID-19

Regional Coordination and Solidarity

chapter 22|13 pages

Europe in the Post-Pandemic World Order

A Human Rights Perspective

chapter 23|12 pages

Globalisation in the Era of Power Transition

Lessons Post-COVID-19 for China and the US

chapter 24|2 pages

Conclusion

Per Aspera Ad Astra 1