Post-COVID-19: Implications for International (Development) Cooperation

  • 21st April 2020
  • by secretary
Paepard
9 April 2020. [UNDP Seoul Policy Centre (USPC) Webinar Series. The world is working on mitigating the enormous challenges of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. However, some ideas on what the recovery will require are already emerging. It is certain that it will represent a major game-changer in international (development) cooperation. Experts from Southern and Northern think tanks discuss how COVID-19 can create the momentum for more and better international cooperation.

  • Debapriya Bhattacharya, Centre for Policy Dialogue, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Jonathan Glennie, Writer and Consultant, Barranquilla, Colombia (view presentation)
  • Philani Mthembu, Institute for Global Dialogue, Pretoria, South Africa
  • Zhang Chuanhong, China Institute for South-South Cooperation in Agriculture, Beijing, China (view presentation)
  • Stephan Klingebiel, USPC (introduction), Seoul, South Korea
  • Artemy Izmestiev, USPC (moderator), Seoul, South Korea

14 April 2020. The world is working on mitigating the enormous challenges of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. However, some ideas on what the recovery will require are already emerging. It is certain that it will represent a major game-changer in international (development) cooperation. Experts from Southern and Northern think tanks discuss how COVID-19 can create the momentum for more and better international cooperation.

  • Paulo Esteves, BRICS Policy Centre, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (view presentation)
  • Qi Gubo, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China
  • Ian Mitchell, Center for Global Development, London, UK
  • Andrea Ordóñez, Southern Voice, Quito, Ecuador
  • Annalisa Prizzon, Overseas Development Institute, London, UK
  • Stephan Klingebiel, USPC (moderator), Seoul, South Korea

16 April 2020.

  • Jorge Chediek, UNOSSC (introduction), New York, USA
  • Sachin Chaturvedi, New Delhi, India
  • Anthony Pipa, Brookings Institution, Washington DC, USA
  • Elizabeth Sidiropoulos, Johannesburg, South Africa
  • Imme Scholz, German Development Institute, Bonn, Germany
  • Stephan Klingebiel, USPC (conclusions), Seoul, South Korea
  • Artemy Izmestiev, USPC (moderator), Seoul, South Korea


Source: PAEPARD FEED