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Globalisation and COVID-19
Manas Chatterji, Urs Luterbacher, Valérie Fert, Bo Chen
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The beginnings of globalisation are usually dated to the last third
of the twentieth century, alongside the rise of supranational
companies, the financial economy and the information technology
revolution. However, from the time the Earth was
“anthropocized” during the Palaeolithic era, globalisation has
not ceased, though it has seen a number of fluctuations, including
the era of WWI and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Globalisation and
COVID-19 examines how the simultaneous immobilisation of billions
created a temporary hold on the mobility which constitutes the very
irrigation of globalisation. In this 31st volume of the book series
Contributions to Conflict Management, Peace Economics and
Development, world-renowned contributors explore the pandemic
through the lens of globalisation, analysing its implications for
the globalised world and its development over time. Through
innovative tools and methodologies of emerging social sciences like
Regional Science, Peace Science, and particularly of Management
Science which includes artificial intelligence and quantum
mechanics, Globalisation and COVID-19 brings together researchers
and practitioners to create a transversal and systemic approach
necessary to interrogating essential questions of pandemic-era
globality.
International migration afflicts nearly every corner of the globe,
from the Americas, Europe and North Africa, and adjoining countries
in South Asia. This migration links the socio-economic statuses of
migrants’ home countries and those into which they are migrating.
This phenomenon has a profound impact upon ethnic conflict,
resource availability, famines and other natural and manmade
disasters, as well as financial, political, social and
environmental implications for some of the world’s most seemingly
unsolvable crises, such as world peace. These vast complexities
have been further exemplified by the COVID-19 pandemic, which, as
analysed through an environmental and migratory lens, is the focus
of this 32nd volume of the book series Contributions to Conflict
Management, Peace Economics and Development. With contributions
from world-renowned scholars, International Migration, COVID-19,
and Environmental Sustainability tackles recent universal subject
matter and ties it to key contemporary issues, including
globalisation and sustainability, that are related to international
migration and its impacts.
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