ABSTRACT
This article examines the policy responses of the European Union (EU) and the United States (US) to the Covid-19 pandemic during its first twelve months. The intensity of the policy challenge, and the ways in which both political systems have been forced to respond, create a ‘moment révélateur’ – a revealing inflection point – that casts light on their relative institutional strengths and weaknesses. It is also a propitious moment for evaluating existing analytical frameworks, in this case the ‘failing forward’ approach to studying the EU. Far from ‘failing forward’, the pandemic has revealed the EU’s ability to innovate and build new institutions, while effective US crisis management through early 2021 was impeded by poor leadership, political polarization and institutional gridlock.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Jim Caporaso, Rachel Epstein, Waltraud Schelkle, Martin Westlake and Jonathan Zeitlin, as well as this journal’s anonymous referees, for their very helpful comments.
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
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Martin Rhodes
Martin Rhodes is Distinguished University Professor in the Josef Korbel School for International Studies at the University of Denver, Denver, Colorado.