Featured image for “Defending civic space during and after the pandemic”

Defending civic space during and after the pandemic

May 27, 2021
Guest post by Thomas Carothers, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Multiple studies of the effects of the pandemic on civil society, including a major IDS report released last week, paint a discouraging picture. Civil society has come under assault from many directions at once, including executive overreach, securitisation of public life, the constriction of online freedoms, sharpened social divisions, and
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Featured image for “Global Covid death toll 3 times higher than the usual stats suggest, and much more skewed towards poor countries”

Global Covid death toll 3 times higher than the usual stats suggest, and much more skewed towards poor countries

May 18, 2021
Some really important number crunching in The Economist this week. They have built an estimate of the number of ‘excess deaths’ worldwide – that is mortality above the pre-Covid average. This gives you a more accurate picture of how many people have died, because so many Covid deaths are not recorded as pandemic-related (whether because of weak stats systems, or
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Featured image for “Book Review: The Plague Cycle: The Unending War Between Humanity and Infectious Disease, by Charles Kenny”

Book Review: The Plague Cycle: The Unending War Between Humanity and Infectious Disease, by Charles Kenny

March 29, 2021
Charles Kenny is a wonderfully fluent and accessible writer. He’s also quick, judging by his latest book, The Plague Cycle: The Unending War Between Humanity and Infectious Disease. Here’s how it opens: ‘The two leading killers worldwide at the start of the twenty-first century are heart attacks and strokes. That is evidence of humanity’s greatest triumph: until recent decades, most
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Featured image for “Next phase in making sense of ’emergent agency in a time of Covid’ kicking off this Wednesday – please join us”

Next phase in making sense of ’emergent agency in a time of Covid’ kicking off this Wednesday – please join us

November 30, 2020
A plug for two rounds of online conversation taking place on Wednesday (2nd December) around the theme of ‘Emergent Agency in a Time of Covid’ The Emergent Agency in a Time of Covid project is definitely the most fun thing in my work at Oxfam right now. Why? First, the discussions so far have been fascinating (check out our webinar
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Featured image for “What are we seeing so far on Emergent Agency in Covid? Top insights, plus next steps.”

What are we seeing so far on Emergent Agency in Covid? Top insights, plus next steps.

November 18, 2020
Spent an intense two hours last week on a webinar discussing the initial findings, hypotheses etc of our Emergent Agency in a Time of Covid project. We had some great panellists (Laurence Cox, Yogesh Ghore, and Katherine Marshall) on social movements, livelihoods and faith organizations, respectively. I cross examined, Irene Guijt chaired, and a good spread of activists and researchers
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Featured image for “Social Protection in a Time of Covid – 4 takeaways and 4 big gaps from a recent global discussion”

Social Protection in a Time of Covid – 4 takeaways and 4 big gaps from a recent global discussion

November 17, 2020
Larissa Pelham, Oxfam’s Social Protection Adviser, reports back on a 4 day Zoomathon Covid-19 has catapulted social protection into the spotlight.  From furloughing to school feeding programmes delivered to homes, 212 states and territories across the world have planned or delivered 1179 social protection interventions in response to the pandemic.  It is the backbone support to families and individuals to
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Featured image for “Initial Findings on Emergent Agency in a time of Covid – launch webinar and briefing”

Initial Findings on Emergent Agency in a time of Covid – launch webinar and briefing

November 6, 2020
In September we kicked off a really interesting project on ‘Emergent Agency in a Time of Covid’, asking people if they wanted to be part of a collective effort to share and discuss the grassroots responses to the pandemic and start to explore their longer-term legacy. The response was encouraging (even a bit overwhelming!), and we’ve spent the last couple
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Featured image for “Voices from the pandemic frontlines: Health worker protests and proposals from 84 countries”

Voices from the pandemic frontlines: Health worker protests and proposals from 84 countries

October 20, 2020
Guest post by Jennifer Johnson for the Accountability Research Center The COVID-19 pandemic has put unprecedented strain on health care systems around the world. Frontline health workers have faced great risks, from lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) to discrimination and harassment. Some face repercussions for whistleblowing or walkouts. This evolving situation has given rise to a new wave of
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Covid-19 as a watershed in how we run the world. Important reflection from Rutger Bregman

October 15, 2020
I’ve been catching up with my reading this week, and really enjoyed this essay (from May – sorry for the delay!). Bregman (a Dutch historian who became an overnight global sensation with this fine outburston taxes at Davos) is brilliant on the role of ideas in driving paradigm shifts. He uses my favourite quote from Milton Friedman ‘“Only a crisis
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Featured image for “Possible Fragments of the Post-Covid World Order, according to The Economist”

Possible Fragments of the Post-Covid World Order, according to The Economist

October 13, 2020
This week’s Economist Special Report on the World Economy is a thought-provoking and beautifully written helicopter overview of the current meltdown. Some extracts: ‘Conditions before the pandemic were forged by the three biggest economic shocks of the 21st century: the integration of China into the world trading system, the financial crisis and the rise of the digital economy. As Chinese
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Featured image for “Power and the Pandemic: Observing COVID-19 in Africa through a Public Authorities Lens”

Power and the Pandemic: Observing COVID-19 in Africa through a Public Authorities Lens

October 9, 2020
This post went up yesterday on the LSE Africa Centre blog, plugging a new paper I co-edited with Tom Kirk Most discussion of Africa’s response to COVID-19 takes place at the national level, focussing on the role of formal state authorities. However, less is known about the role of ‘public authorities’: traditional chiefs, self-help groups, kinship networks, professional associations, faith-based
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Lest we forget: Why investments in hygiene, sanitation and water are key to fighting COVID-19

September 28, 2020
Guest post by Muyatwa Sitali, Head of Country Engagement, Sanitation and Water for All COVID-19 has taught us that a world where nearly half of its population do not have what they need to properly wash their hands at critical times is not a safe world. We are delicately and dangerously connected. A disease which started in one city has
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