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Ethical Failures of the COVID-19 Pandemic Response
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Ethical Failures of the COVID-19 Pandemic Response/ by Péter Marton.
Author:
Marton, Péter.
Description:
XVII, 279 p. 6 illus.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
International relations. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-09194-0
ISBN:
9783031091940
Ethical Failures of the COVID-19 Pandemic Response
Marton, Péter.
Ethical Failures of the COVID-19 Pandemic Response
[electronic resource] /by Péter Marton. - 1st ed. 2022. - XVII, 279 p. 6 illus.online resource.
Chapter 1: Introduction and Analytic Framework -- Part I: War on Paper -- Chapter 2: Ethics in Governance: Pandemic Response as a Vital Interest -- Chapter 3: The Ethics of Response to Plague on Distant Shores -- Chapter 4: The Ethics of Practices in Pandemic Response -- Part II: Friction -- Chapter 5: The Need/Failure to Prepare and Prevent -- Chapter 6: The Need/Failure to Anticipate and Pre-empt -- Chapter 7: The Need/Failure to React, Adequately Prioritise and Persevere -- Chapter 8: The Need/Failure to Honestly Account and Take Responsibility -- Chapter 9: Lessons, Recommendations, Conclusion.
‘Ethical Failures of the COVID-19 Response insightfully anticipates the coming pandemic post-mortems by focusing empirically and conceptually on decisionmakers and decision-making from Wuhan to Omicron. An essential text.’ —Stephen Taylor, Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, Queen Mary University of London, UK ‘Future historians of science, medicine, and public health examining the Covid pandemic will rely on Péter Marton’s acute, multi-dimensional analysis.’ —Matthew Adamson, Professor of the History of Science and Technology, McDaniel College, USA ‘This book is an important contribution conceptualising the key mistakes and failures of decision-making from an ethical perspective.’ —Scott Romaniuk, Visiting Fellow, University of South Wales, UK This book draws attention to the non-biological—political, economic, societal and cultural—variables shaping both the emergence and persistence of the COVID-19 pandemic and the global response to it, with a particular focus on political decisionmakers’ role in the domestic and international politics surrounding the process of the pandemic. The book identifies the strategic and underlying ethical failures of decision making, using a process-tracing approach to reconstruct considerations, decisions and actions by key leaders—interested in thus weaving a global narrative of the response. The author highlights key speech acts, and interprets the causal implications embedded in a chronological and contextualised appraisal of events, statements and public health measures. The book further discusses the normative ethics of pandemic response, and presents lessons drawn from the present experience. It also offers a normative analysis taking into consideration pre-pandemic guidelines for response, including in the literature of public health ethics and pandemic preparedness plans. Péter Marton is Associate Professor at Corvinus University, and Adjunct Professor at McDaniel College, Budapest, Hungary.
ISBN: 9783031091940
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-09194-0doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
554886
International relations.
LC Class. No.: JZ2-6530
Dewey Class. No.: 327
Ethical Failures of the COVID-19 Pandemic Response
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Chapter 1: Introduction and Analytic Framework -- Part I: War on Paper -- Chapter 2: Ethics in Governance: Pandemic Response as a Vital Interest -- Chapter 3: The Ethics of Response to Plague on Distant Shores -- Chapter 4: The Ethics of Practices in Pandemic Response -- Part II: Friction -- Chapter 5: The Need/Failure to Prepare and Prevent -- Chapter 6: The Need/Failure to Anticipate and Pre-empt -- Chapter 7: The Need/Failure to React, Adequately Prioritise and Persevere -- Chapter 8: The Need/Failure to Honestly Account and Take Responsibility -- Chapter 9: Lessons, Recommendations, Conclusion.
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‘Ethical Failures of the COVID-19 Response insightfully anticipates the coming pandemic post-mortems by focusing empirically and conceptually on decisionmakers and decision-making from Wuhan to Omicron. An essential text.’ —Stephen Taylor, Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, Queen Mary University of London, UK ‘Future historians of science, medicine, and public health examining the Covid pandemic will rely on Péter Marton’s acute, multi-dimensional analysis.’ —Matthew Adamson, Professor of the History of Science and Technology, McDaniel College, USA ‘This book is an important contribution conceptualising the key mistakes and failures of decision-making from an ethical perspective.’ —Scott Romaniuk, Visiting Fellow, University of South Wales, UK This book draws attention to the non-biological—political, economic, societal and cultural—variables shaping both the emergence and persistence of the COVID-19 pandemic and the global response to it, with a particular focus on political decisionmakers’ role in the domestic and international politics surrounding the process of the pandemic. The book identifies the strategic and underlying ethical failures of decision making, using a process-tracing approach to reconstruct considerations, decisions and actions by key leaders—interested in thus weaving a global narrative of the response. The author highlights key speech acts, and interprets the causal implications embedded in a chronological and contextualised appraisal of events, statements and public health measures. The book further discusses the normative ethics of pandemic response, and presents lessons drawn from the present experience. It also offers a normative analysis taking into consideration pre-pandemic guidelines for response, including in the literature of public health ethics and pandemic preparedness plans. Péter Marton is Associate Professor at Corvinus University, and Adjunct Professor at McDaniel College, Budapest, Hungary.
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