Taming Pandemics in International Relations: Why Do States Cooperate in Transboundary Crises? An Applied History Perspective

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    Abstract

    This article introduces three historical situations where governments, or more accu- rately, specific leaders in office, shaped the international context in dealing with a transboundary crisis—and were in turn crucially affected in their reign by this crisis. The question at stake is: under what conditions did leaders (and their governments) engage in international cooperation to deal with the transboundary crisis at hand, and how did this cooperation impact the development of the crisis? An informed argu- ment is made for combining crisis management research—in particular a model oper- ationalizing conditions for transboundary cooperation—with an applied history per- spective to shed light on the current obstacles to international cooperation in Covid-19 times.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)36-61
    JournalJournal of Applied History
    Volume2
    Issue number1-2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 4 Dec 2020

    Keywords

    • transboundary/transnational cooperation
    • international relations
    • pandemics in history
    • Napoleon
    • Concert of Europe
    • Spanish Flu
    • Covid-19

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