Politics in a Pandemic
Governance and Crisis Management in Southeast Asia
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:8th Jan '26
£18.00
This title is due to be published on 8th January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Examining how developmental-state legacies, distribution of authority, and state–society relations shaped governance in the pandemic.
This Element shows how the COVID-19 pandemic offers unique insight into how regimes govern in 'hard times.' In Southeast Asia, public health and economic strain revealed the scope for adaptation in the face of crisis, against the pull of path-dependent habits and patterns. Especially important were legacies of the developmental-state model.The COVID-19 pandemic offers unique insight into how regimes govern in 'hard times.' In Southeast Asia, public health and economic strain revealed the scope for adaptation in the face of crisis, against the pull of path-dependent habits and patterns. Recent experience of SARS and other outbreaks, as well as wider political and economic contexts, shaped readiness and responses. Especially important were legacies of the developmental-state model. Even largely absent a prior welfarist turn, core developmentalist attributes helped foster citizen buy-in and compliance: how efficiently and well states could coordinate provision of necessary infrastructure, spur biomedical innovation, marshal resources, tamp down political pressure, and constrain rent-seeking, all while maintaining popular trust. Also salient to pandemic governance were the actual distribution of authority, beyond what institutional structures imply, and the extent to which state–society relations, including habits of coercion or rent-seeking, encourage more or less programmatic or confidence-building frames and approaches.
ISBN: 9781108927789
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
75 pages