Coevolution of policy and science during the pandemic
8th Jan 2021 Yian Yin Jian Gao Benjamin F. Jones Dashun Wang Science Vol. 371, Issue 6525, pp. 128-130 @sciencemagazine
8th Jan 2021 Yian Yin Jian Gao Benjamin F. Jones Dashun Wang Science Vol. 371, Issue 6525, pp. 128-130 @sciencemagazine
21st Sept 2020 John Crace The Guardian @guardian Boris Johnson nowhere to be seen as CMO and CSA level with … Read More
INGSA/Koi Tū EXCLUSIVE INGSA is proud to present the first preliminary report from the INGSA Evidence-to-Policy Tracker data – How did countries respond and when? How did their strategies change over time?
Originally published on Apolitical Advice from the right experts can be transformative in policy design, but first you have to … Read More
With more than 24 million recorded COVID-19 cases, over 830,000 deaths, and the pandemic still raging in many regions of the world, scientists from an array of disciplines are asking why some nations have fared better than others at curbing its spread. Now, a new University of Colorado Boulder-led effort aims to look at the role science itself has played in influencing how countries and their leaders have responded – and what that response (or lack thereof) has meant for citizens.… Read More
17th July 2020 George Parker, Clive Cookson, Sarah Neville, Sebastian Payne, Camilla Hodgson, Anna Gross and Laura Hughes The Financial Times … Read More
18th July 2020 David Crow and Hannah Kuchler The Financial Times @FT Sunbelt states suffer a big rise in cases and … Read More
21st May 2020 Daniel Freeman et al Cambridge University Press Background An invisible threat has visibly altered the world. Governments … Read More
10th May 2020 Riyanti Djalante; Laely Nurhidayah; et al SSRN Abstract The World Health Organisation (WHO) announced the new coronavirus … Read More
5th June 2020 Noam Obermeister University of Cambridge @NObermeister Noam is a PhD Student at Cambridge University Policymakers around the … Read More