Abstract
Preparing for the next pandemic became not only a national task, but a problem with international, even global dimensions. No single nation on its own is able to stop the next pandemic; no borders are strong enough to keep microbial threats outside the nation-state’s territory. This essay focuses on the role of the WHO in pandemic preparedness planning in the 1990s and early 2000s: What vision of the global future did the international organization follow and design? What measures did it propose to reduce risks? What narratives did it use to define its own role in these processes?
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Global Futurities: Articulating the Struggle for (Other) worldly Justice
- “We Must Not Be Caught Sleeping.” Pandemic Futures, the WHO, and Global Preparedness Plans in the 1990s and Early 2000s
- Decolonizing the Past and Confronting Climate Change Futures: Bringing the State Back In
- The Political Economy of Trade, Work, and Economy: De-globalization – or Re-globalization?
- Obsolete Pasts? Globalization as an Analytical Prism in Vincenzo Formaleoni’s History of the Black Sea (1788–89)
- Thinking Planetary About Global Futures: Posthuman Cosmopolitanism
- Book Reviews
- Marlies Glasius: Authoritarian Practices in the Global Age
- Fadi Lama: Why the West Can’t Win: From Bretton Woods to a Multipolar World
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Global Futurities: Articulating the Struggle for (Other) worldly Justice
- “We Must Not Be Caught Sleeping.” Pandemic Futures, the WHO, and Global Preparedness Plans in the 1990s and Early 2000s
- Decolonizing the Past and Confronting Climate Change Futures: Bringing the State Back In
- The Political Economy of Trade, Work, and Economy: De-globalization – or Re-globalization?
- Obsolete Pasts? Globalization as an Analytical Prism in Vincenzo Formaleoni’s History of the Black Sea (1788–89)
- Thinking Planetary About Global Futures: Posthuman Cosmopolitanism
- Book Reviews
- Marlies Glasius: Authoritarian Practices in the Global Age
- Fadi Lama: Why the West Can’t Win: From Bretton Woods to a Multipolar World