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1 |
ID:
173593
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Summary/Abstract |
The present article has focused on the comparative study of adverse impact of forces and techniques of globalization in spreading corona virus in the world and the emergence of political conflict among India, China and USA. As we are aware about the fact that corona virus has created many challenges before the governments and no one is able to get solution of these challenges.
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2 |
ID:
173584
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Summary/Abstract |
The COVID 19 virus pandemic, taking a toll upon thousands of millennial, points towards retribution of nature, ruthlessly exploited over the years. The greed in man prompted them to engage in amassing wealth and luxury even at the behest of nature, as security measures of life. It was never in the wildest of our dreams that a virus could bring the entire world to a standstill, causing devastating effect on the economy.
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3 |
ID:
173592
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Summary/Abstract |
The novel corona Virus which originated in China, up till now has no vaccine or cure and has affected more countries than both the world wars did. In the times when social distancing and isolation are the most pertinent solutions for the containment of the virus, challenges for a country like India, having a population of 1.3 billion are extraordinary. COVID 19 is not only imposing a threat to public health but also leading to a sudden interruption of business operations across India.
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4 |
ID:
173583
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Summary/Abstract |
In 1918, the Spanish Flu infected 500 million people globally, when the world’s population was just 1.8 billion. The pandemic claimed the lives of 50 million people—14 million to 18 million of them in India alone.1It means ten percent of the population was eliminated by the flu from planet earth. The world was different then. Weapons and technology have not yet substituted or replaced human beings.
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5 |
ID:
173591
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Summary/Abstract |
In the times of the global Coronavirus disease (hereafter referred to as COVID-19) pandemic, the objective of the paper is to outline issues, challenges and responses with reference to gender at the global, regional and national levels. The paper locates both challenges and responses of the COVID-19 within the feminist understanding of the society and social order.
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6 |
ID:
173599
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Summary/Abstract |
ealth is a global public good. Other than being a fundamental human right under Article 25 of the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, public health has appeared on the global security agenda more frequently from after the end of the Cold War. Departing from traditional views on state security, the post-Cold War world has witnessed greater international cooperation and global fellowship in tackling nontraditional security threats emerging from ethnic conflict, human migration, economic instability, environmental degradation and climate change, and epidemiological crises such as the spread of infectious disease, than ever before.
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7 |
ID:
173582
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Summary/Abstract |
Fortunately, the overall situation in India is far better as compared to most of the other rich powers including the US, because the otherwise worsening pandemic due to Covid-19 has been well-controlled under the visionary leadership of PM Narendra Modi, by immediately imposing three week’s lock down and further extending it by 19 days, which had amazing reduced the likely figure of eight lakhs plus Corona virus-infected patients to around few thousands by the end of lockdown 2.0. But as is clearly visible that the pandemic is still beyond the expected limits in many parts of the country despite two months long efforts by both Union and states governments to contain its spread and that is substantiated by the rising number of Corona infected patients.
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8 |
ID:
173587
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Summary/Abstract |
Bats are linked to seven major epidemics in the past 3 decades. In the case of SARS and Coronavirus, the Chinese Horse shoe bats are the natural carriers of these viruses. The civet cats eat these bats, the Chinese people also eat the bats and the cats, both local delicacies, these viruses are then transmitted to the Chinese people. From the Chinese people then it spreads to the rest of the people in the world.
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9 |
ID:
173590
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Summary/Abstract |
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the crucial role of the UN and its agencies and is a stark reminder of the importance of effective multilateralism. As the coronavirus does not see borders or discriminate, the fight to defeat it should not result in stigmatisation, inequality or injustice. The pandemic has put the complex systems of the world to catastrophes, and therefore it has affected the lives of the most venerable classes of people like refugees, people living in conflict areas, informal sector labourers, women and children.
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10 |
ID:
173602
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Summary/Abstract |
Globalization involves a network of activities taking place in one part of the world having its affecting other regions in the world. Under prevailing circumstances, the process of globalization operational for with touching new heights in the twentieth century has ushered in a plethora of opportunities. It believes in an integrated economy, culture, and administration. Globalization ushered in welfare and a feeling of freedom to travel across borders yet the ever-increasing process of interconnectedness across territorial boundaries has negatively affected social cohesion and decreased the level of solidarity. Against the environment of the hegemony of the developed capitalist state and great power politics, integration of states on a regional scale became inevitable.
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11 |
ID:
173595
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Summary/Abstract |
Healthcare, though being a public good, in fact a fundamental commodity that is essential to people’s well-being, leading to a demand for improvements in it, is a complex, multidimensional, multilayered challenge that included not just provision of access to care centres and hospitals at different levels, but also the entire supply chain of medical education and generation of medical specialists, technicians, and professionals, as also diagnostic services and equipment, pharmaceuticals and insurance, etc.
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12 |
ID:
173594
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13 |
ID:
173586
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Summary/Abstract |
Covid has not required a global economic crisis or a World War to become a pandemic. It is, in contrary, threatening to accelerate a global economic slowdown and fuel a conflict of global proportions among major powers over scarce resources and strategic influence. The on-going pandemic will have significant economic impact globally.
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14 |
ID:
173598
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Summary/Abstract |
Healthcare systems are the backbone of the developmental strategy of a country. Human capital formation and demographic dividend can be achieved through a robust health care system network. When right to life is a fundamental right in countries like India, then the facilitator of this right, i.e. healthcare system needs to be well organized. A better healthcare system is the taste of excellence of real will of the government who enchants constitutional commitments for its sustainability.
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15 |
ID:
173596
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Summary/Abstract |
It has been an enigma for many across the globe about the less number of pandemic Covid-19 virus affects among countries of South Asia in comparison to Europe and America. Not less enigmatic is the fact of managing the spread of Covid-19 virus affects by the governments of SAARC countries.
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16 |
ID:
173600
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Summary/Abstract |
ith the exponential spread of the disease caused by coronavirus, the World Health Organization (WHO) has declared Covid-19 as a pandemic. Although the outbreak has somewhat stabilized in China and South Korea, there has been a sudden spread of the disease across Europe, which has now become the epicentre of the pandemic. After the initial description in Wuhan and China, Italy was hit first in Europe and the impact has been immense.
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17 |
ID:
173601
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Summary/Abstract |
Spread of COVID-19 Pandemic in the 21st century has emerged as a daunting challenge for the world community. The current ongoing crisis has put the nations is at war with a dangerous enemy (CVID-19), and it has also put many questions on health security not only for the developing countries but also for the developed world. The outbreak of COVID-19 has shown that non-security threat has become prevalent in the current scenario.
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18 |
ID:
173597
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Summary/Abstract |
At present, our world battles the deadly coronavirus facing severe damage to world economies due to a global financial crisis and further, leading to a shortage in healthcare facilities and equipment. As most countries brave this uncalled-for global health pandemic, they also are looking for exit plans and strategies to deal with the Post-COVID situation.
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19 |
ID:
173585
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Summary/Abstract |
The COVID-19 outbreak is a typical public health emergency. Its rapid spread has not only affected the lives of hundreds of millions of families, but it has also disrupted the pace of economic and social development, resulting in incalculable economic and social losses. In light of this, the question arises of whether the public administrators could have prevented the outbreak.
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20 |
ID:
173589
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Summary/Abstract |
The COVID-crisis has apparently halted the unsteadfast chariot of globalization and given a new lease of life to the Westphalian inter-state system, as the tendency of outward interaction has given way to more inward looking orientation, from global to national and from national to local. The nation-states have yet again emerged as the central actors in combating the novel coronavirus and mitigating various unfavorable repercussions emanating as a direct and indirect outcomes of the pandemic.
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