Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 4:42:29 GMT
If This Were Not Achieved, the Damage Would Be Equally Great. I Can't Imagine Russia Knowingly Taking Such a Risk, and in That Sense, I Suppose It is Convinced It is on the Right Path. But This Self-perception Could Be Misleading. Why Did Coronavirus Vaccine Research Become the New Battlefield of Geopolitics? The Development of Vaccines, a Strategic Issue to Overcome This Crisis of the Century, is Truly What We Previously Called "Global Collective Goods." That is, the Production of Material or Immaterial Goods That Are Fundamental for Much of the World, Such as International Security, Free Trade Routes or an Intact Environment. Those Who Were Leaders in the Manufacture of These Products Traditionally Determined International Policy in Other Areas as Well.
Those Were, in a Way, the Tools of the Hegemonic Countries. If Vaccines Are the New Global Collective Goods, It is Not Surprising That a Race for Them Has Begun. However, There Are Two Arguments That Must Be Kept Separate. Some Say That This Pandemic Makes Us See That We Must Necessarily Think UK Mobile Database Globally, That We Need, in a Way, a Global Structural Policy on These Global Health Issues.That Each Country Now Mainly Cares About Itself. I Don't Think It's Clear Which Argument Will Win. But if the Second Wins, Then We Really Have a Confrontation Between.
Countries, With All the Resulting Consequences. This is Not Likely to Benefit Anyone in the Long Run. The Big Players Currently Seem to Be Russia, the United States and China. Where Does the European Union Stand in This Competition? The More Than Promising Developments for a Vaccine Listed by the Who Prove That There is Currently an Enormous Effort at Different Levels. So Sooner or Later There Will Be an Effective Vaccine. By the Way, at Any Other Time in History This Would Have Been Impossible. But the Crucial Question is: Who Will Have Access to the Vaccine and Who Will Benefit From It? In Recent Months, All Large Countries With Economic Capacity Have Secured the Rights to Use Vaccines or Are Promoting Research With State Companies or State Participations.
Those Were, in a Way, the Tools of the Hegemonic Countries. If Vaccines Are the New Global Collective Goods, It is Not Surprising That a Race for Them Has Begun. However, There Are Two Arguments That Must Be Kept Separate. Some Say That This Pandemic Makes Us See That We Must Necessarily Think UK Mobile Database Globally, That We Need, in a Way, a Global Structural Policy on These Global Health Issues.That Each Country Now Mainly Cares About Itself. I Don't Think It's Clear Which Argument Will Win. But if the Second Wins, Then We Really Have a Confrontation Between.
Countries, With All the Resulting Consequences. This is Not Likely to Benefit Anyone in the Long Run. The Big Players Currently Seem to Be Russia, the United States and China. Where Does the European Union Stand in This Competition? The More Than Promising Developments for a Vaccine Listed by the Who Prove That There is Currently an Enormous Effort at Different Levels. So Sooner or Later There Will Be an Effective Vaccine. By the Way, at Any Other Time in History This Would Have Been Impossible. But the Crucial Question is: Who Will Have Access to the Vaccine and Who Will Benefit From It? In Recent Months, All Large Countries With Economic Capacity Have Secured the Rights to Use Vaccines or Are Promoting Research With State Companies or State Participations.