COVID-19 and vaccine nationalism : managing the politics of global pandemics /
Covid-19 and Vaccine Nationalism: Managing the Politics of Global Pandemics provides an in-depth overview of the complex nature politics played in vaccine production and distribution. The book ensures international and domestic politics, governance, and mechanisms of vaccine production and administr...
| Main Author: | |
|---|---|
| Corporate Author: | |
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Cambridge, MA :
Academic Press,
2023.
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
Table of Contents:
- Front Cover
- Covid-19 and Vaccine Nationalism
- COVID-19 AND VACCINE NATIONALISM: MANAGING THE POLITICS OF GLOBAL PANDEMICS
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface
- 1
- COVID-19 and vaccine nationalism: managing the politics of global pandemics, an introduction
- Politics, past and present forms of nationalism: defining vaccine nationalism
- Focus on contexts of nationalism: an overview
- Ideology and theory of nationalism
- Categories of nationalism and vaccine nationalism
- Highlighting on economic nationalism
- COVID-19 crisis and big picture frameworks
- Systems approach, markets, and global vaccine governance
- Market failure and COVAX
- Vaccine nationalism and tiered global citizenships
- Governance and responsibility within the global system
- National interest and self-preservation?
- Interdisciplinary focus and multiple methodological strategies
- Recapitulation of plausible conceptual operational and non-state actor approaches
- Summing up the approaches argument
- Settling on the social justice and fairness frame
- Book chapter layout
- Conclusion
- References
- 2
- COVID-19 vaccine concerns: an overview on how nations got here
- COVID19: the messy numbers problem
- Tracking disease, national origins, and early therapeutics
- Bats versus labs: the two competing theories of the origin of coronavirus
- Global pandemic and other immediate mitigation solutions
- Essential medicines and treatments
- Vaccine heterogeneity and SARS-CoV-2
- Africa participated in COVID-19 vaccine trials and the need for benefit sharing
- Promising impactful mRNA vaccines research
- Multilateral international organization concerns and pleas for vaccines
- Africa: developing countries appeal for help, self-reliance, and solidarity
- National pride and Iran's campaign against vaccine apartheid
- Cuba and vaccine sovereignty.
- Russia and the new Sputnik moment
- Russia's vaccine diplomacy and tool of engagement or war over vaccines
- Israel, vaccines, and the triumph of ultranationalism
- Vaccines, workplace, and societies-everyday living experiences
- Vaccine passports and cards
- Of billionaires, vaccine T-shirts, and merchandise
- Conclusion
- References
- 3
- American politics and global COVID-19 vaccinations
- Vaccines: historical antecedents and triumph of science
- Comparative vaccine research, regulation, and rollout
- Benefits and risks
- COVID-19 vaccine presidential election politics
- Challenge of political COVID-19 vaccine messaging
- Global collaborations: GAVI and COVAX
- Patent rights
- Influenza and global collaborations and controversies
- American nationalism as explanatory factor in COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy
- Tuskegee and black bodies
- Republicans, evangelicals, white Christian nationalists, and vaccines
- Religious faction resistance to vaccine is not a new thing
- Operation Warp Speed paradox
- Array of renewed hope as Biden takes over
- Vaccination month of action and incentives for vaccinations
- American states and vaccine lotteries
- Presidential leadership matters
- COVAX support, hoarding of vaccines as an act of nationalism, or the arsenal of vaccines?
- Surplus vaccines, children vaccinations, and accusations of selfishness and national defense
- Conclusion
- References
- Further reading
- 4
- China's nationalism and COVID-19 vaccines
- Defining China's nationalism and historical perspectives
- Ancient cohesive China
- Self-determination and how is China's nationalism imagined
- Sun Yat-sen: the father of modern Chinese nationalism
- A strong and confident China and western power anxiety
- China's nationalism and the external factor viewed through COVID-19 vaccines production
- Taiwan.
- China's COVID-19 vaccines and triumph of China's technologies
- China's national rejuvenation and the lingering question of prejudice
- Africans in China and COVID-19
- Vaccine diplomacy and campaigns to promote China's vaccines
- Economic vaccine nationalism, protectionism, bilateralism, and governance
- Two-part strategy
- Vaccine hesitancy and outreach and Zero-COVID administration
- Conclusion
- References
- 5
- Fragmented COVID-19 vaccine nationalism and politics in the EU and the UK
- The European Union and global power
- Restless European nationalism and citizenship
- History and governance of the EU
- National norms and politics and COVID-19 challenges
- EU COVID-19 vaccination strategy
- EU's views on China and Russia's vaccines
- Individual implementations in a few countries/nations
- Vaccine passports and protests in Western Europe
- Britain's AstraZeneca's rollout and the contours of European vaccine diplomacy
- Traveling to and from Britain
- Touting success: vaccines and Brexit, and Scottish nationalism and rejection of vaccine nationalism
- Throwing away unused vaccines: "we reject vaccine nationalism?"
- Donating vaccines
- Conclusion
- References
- 6
- COVID-19 vaccine politics: India's nationalism and global supplies
- Nationalism and the colonial past
- "China Virus" as reference point for nationalistic rhetoric
- The vaccine challenge and an emergent global race
- Self-reliant myth and message of hope: Serum Institute and National Pride
- Jawaharlal Nehru's nationalist vaccine charge
- Mounting political pressure and preventable death: the COVID-19 wave of May 2021
- India's alleged vaccine nationalism and diplomacy
- Expanding vaccinations
- Did Modi's government learn from previous mistakes?
- International and domestic setbacks
- Vaccine hesitancy and corruption.
- Antecedents to vaccine resistance and vaccine boosters
- Vaccine Maitri or Vaccine Friendship Program
- Blaming China, assumptions of vaccine nationalism, and fault lines
- Conclusion
- References
- 7
- The United Nations call to end vaccine nationalism
- Strands of vaccine politics
- Policy experts say no to vaccine nationalism
- UN members and the politics of vaccine apartheid
- The United Nations General Assembly vaccine nationalism
- Human rights framing: Africa and vaccine apartheid
- Big power supremacy battles
- Triumph of corporate power and pandemics
- The COVID-19 vaccine access challenges through the lenses of World Leader's UN Meeting
- Biden's promise: arsenal of vaccines
- Global COVID-19 summit: Building Back Better
- Africans reiterate their concerns and share their policy implementation outlooks
- Caribbean and small islands policy positions at the UN General Assembly
- Voices from Europe on vaccine equity
- Omicron and more COVID-19 and the 2nd global COVID-19 vaccine summit
- Conclusion
- References
- 8
- Reflections on vaccine nationalism and global inequalities
- Pandemics are global, but they don't affect everyone equally
- First and second booster vaccine doses as a form of inequality?
- Science is cumulative: lessons from AIDS and other diseases
- A recapitulation of collaborations and partnerships
- The World Bank and WHO and international opposition to vaccine nationalism
- Voices from senior statesmen and experts
- The troubled nature of global vaccine management
- Hesitancy, maladministration, and the politics of misinformation and disinformation
- Capitalism Matters: Big Pharma Profits
- Vaccine tourism as another potential counter argument against vaccine nationalism?
- Africans destroy vaccines
- Vaccine inequalities, digital divides, and scheduling appointments.
- Vaccine efficacy ranking grades and hierarchies
- Rich but left out of vaccine nationalism narrative
- A convoluted concept
- Problem framing
- Pfizer's FDA Full Approval
- Political will and vaccine donations
- Third shots versus equity and global solidarity
- Settling third shot debate in the United States and conversations for fourth shot
- Sharing technology
- Conclusion
- References
- 9
- Moving forward beyond politics of COVID-19 vaccines development
- Strengthening international institutional capacity
- Increased funding
- Establishment of permanent locus of collaboration and strategic reserves within developing areas
- Collaboration of vaccine productions and genome sequencing
- Trust and involvement of grassroot organizations and improve health and vaccine education
- Leadership and transparency
- Ambassadors for global mutual support systems in pandemic responses
- Strengthen nonprofits philanthropic interventions
- Corporate social responsibility and cessation of vaccine nationalism
- Final remarks and conclusions
- References
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
- Z
- Back Cover.