The european commission in Covid-19 vaccine cooperation: leadership vs coronationalism?

被引:10
|
作者
Deters, Henning [1 ]
Zardo, Federica [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vienna, EIF Ctr European Integrat Res, Dept Polit Sci, Vienna, Austria
[2] Danube Univ Krems, Dept Migrat & Globalisat, Krems, Austria
关键词
COVAX; COVID-19; European Commission; leadership; procurement; vaccines; EU;
D O I
10.1080/13501763.2022.2064900
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
During the first weeks of the Covid-19 pandemic, European Union (EU) member states competed over scarce countermeasures. Regarding vaccines, a few member states launched exclusive joint endeavours, yet eventually, the EU centralised vaccine provisioning. The EU's external vaccine diplomacy proceeded almost inversely. After stepping into the breach in global health governance, European leadership faltered and global collaboration progressed more slowly. This article explores Europe's diverging trajectories in the regional and global provisioning of Covid-19 vaccines. Focussing on the European Commission's leadership, we investigate to what extent it promoted regional and international cooperation and with what success. We also explain which factors enabled and constrained Commission leadership. Employing a controlled comparison and process tracing, we find that Commission leadership was more extensive and impactful in regional than in global vaccine provisioning. Member state support was the main enabling condition. Without support, institutional capacity and resources were insufficient for impactful leadership.
引用
收藏
页码:1051 / 1071
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] COVID-19 vaccine apartheid and the failure of global cooperation
    Brown, Stephen
    Rosier, Morgane
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL OF POLITICS & INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, 2023, 25 (03): : 535 - 554
  • [2] Divergent Attitudes Toward COVID-19 Vaccine vs Influenza Vaccine
    Steelfisher, Gillian K.
    Findling, Mary G.
    Caporello, Hannah L.
    Mcgowan, Ericka
    Espino, Laura
    Sutton, Jazmyne
    [J]. JAMA NETWORK OPEN, 2023, 6 (12) : E2349881
  • [3] Correcting COVID-19 vaccine misinformation Lancet Commission on COVID-19 Vaccines and Therapeutics Task Force Members
    Hotez, Peter
    Batista, Carolina
    Ergonul, Onder
    Figueroa, J. Peter
    Gilbert, Sarah
    Gursel, Mayda
    Hassanain, Mazen
    Kang, Gagandeep
    Kim, Jerome H.
    Lall, Bhavna
    Larson, Heidi
    Naniche, Denise
    Sheahan, Timothy
    Shoham, Shmuel
    Wilder-Smith, Annelies
    Strub-Wourgaft, Nathalie
    Yadav, Prashant
    Bottazzi, Maria Elena
    [J]. ECLINICALMEDICINE, 2021, 33
  • [4] The Lancet COVID-19 Commission
    Sachs, Jeffrey D.
    Horton, Richard
    Bagenal, Jessamy
    Ben Amor, Yanis
    Caman, Ozge Karadag
    Lafortune, Guillaume
    [J]. LANCET, 2020, 396 (10249): : 454 - 455
  • [5] Create a COVID-19 commission
    Chyba, Christopher F.
    Cassel, Christine K.
    Graham, Susan L.
    Holdren, John P.
    Penhoet, Ed
    Press, William H.
    Savitz, Maxine
    Varmus, Harold
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2021, 374 (6570) : 932 - 935
  • [6] The European Commission and the COVID-19 pandemic: a pluri-institutional approach
    Kassim, Hussein
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY, 2023, 30 (04) : 612 - 634
  • [7] Beyond "Vaccine Nationalism ": China's Cooperation with the Middle East in the COVID-19 Vaccine
    Niu, Song
    Wu, Rui
    [J]. CHINA-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2023, 21 (01) : 114 - 134
  • [8] Assessing the role of the European Council and the European Commission during the migration and COVID-19 crises
    Moloney, David
    Princen, Sebastiaan
    [J]. WEST EUROPEAN POLITICS, 2024, 47 (07) : 1556 - 1587
  • [10] International cooperation during COVID-19: Case study vaccine cooperation and its impact in Indonesia
    Pratiwi, Fadhila Inas
    Muttaqien, M.
    Samy, Muhammad
    Fadli, Jilan Hanifah
    Intan, Angelique Angie
    Kusuma, Nugraha Ryadi
    [J]. ASIAN POLITICS & POLICY, 2022, 14 (03) : 403 - 422