COVID and the Global Order: Nationalism vs. Cosmopolitanism

Event time: 
Thursday, October 29, 2020 - 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Location: 
Online () See map
Event description: 

The Jackson Institute and the Yale Law School Center for Global Legal Challenges will co-host the discussion, “Nationalism vs. Cosmopolitanism,” featuring: Michael Lind, Professor of Practice, Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas; and Seyla Benhabib, Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Professor of Philosophy Emerita at Yale and Senior Research Fellow and Professor Adjunct of Law at Columbia.
Samuel Moyn, the Henry R. Luce Professor of Jurisprudence at Yale Law School and a Professor of History at Yale, will moderate.
The talk is part of a virtual discussion series on COVID and the Global Order. 

The 2020 coronavirus pandemic has cost hundreds of thousands of lives. In the process, it has placed new stresses on an already fragile global order. In the early days of the pandemic, the failure of the World Health Organization to stem the spread of the virus led many to question the efficacy of global institutions to address global threats. Many nations tried to prevent the spread of the virus by shutting their borders to travel. The failure of a coherent global response has laid bare how much global institutions had come to rely on a United States that, in this instance, abdicated its role as the world’s indispensable nation. This series will ask how the coronavirus pandemic has affected the global order and whether these effects will last long after the pandemic itself is finally over. 
The discussion is open to the public, but registration is required.