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Public Health and National Security after COVID-19

In partnership with the US National Defense University’s Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction (CSWMD), the Oxford Programme on International Peace and Security (IPS) examined how the US and the UK should reassess their approaches to national security in light of COVID-19.

As a part of its research project, Public Health and National Security after COVID-19, IPS, in partnership with the US National Defense University’s Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction (CSWMD), examined how the US and the UK should reassess their approaches to national security in light of COVID-19. The project, which was supported by Oxford’s Research & Public Policy Partnership Scheme, was led by IPS Executive Director Federica D’Alessandra, alongside Nima Gerami, IPS and CSWMD Consultant, and Amanda Moodie, CSWMD Policy Fellow.

 

Despite their oft-cited leadership in pandemic preparedness and outsized roles in the governance of global health, the US and the UK struggled to respond effectively to the spread of COVID-19. Consequently, this prompted vital debate about the grave impact of emerging infectious diseases and the need to identify public health as a national and international security priority. The IPS-CSWMD research project analysed the evolution of the health-security nexus and provided recommendations for strengthening the global health architecture in a post-COVID-19 world.

 

CSWMD has been designated by the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as the focal point for education in the Department of Defense on the challenges posed by weapons of mass destruction. Through collaboration with IPS, the research team engaged with policy stakeholders, including within the Department of Defense, the Department of State, and their UK counterparts, to assess the policy trade-offs involved in the increasing securitisation of public health.

Read the final report here.

PROJECT TIMELINE

October 2020–November 2021

Publications

Rethinking Health Security After COVID-19

Policy Paper, Oxford Programme on International Peace and Security, May 2021 Read more

People

Federica D’Alessandra

Deputy Director, ELAC | Director, Oxford Programme on International Peace and Security (IPS)

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Nima Gerami

Research Consultant

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