Over the last decades, globalisation has led to a new class of global citizens. While the access to this global citizenship is still not spread evenly, many have enjoyed the freedom to move, work, and travel with no limits. However, this cosmopolitan globalisation rhetoric of a borderless world has been drastically slowed down by Covid-19. This pandemic has introduced a new level of uncertainty in global affairs and led many to question whether citizens will be able to continue enjoying the freedom of movement once the crisis is over. To share this article: https://apolitical.co/en/solution_article/will-covid-19-be-the-end-of-the-global-citizen To cite this article: Calzada, I. (2020), Will Covid-19 be the end of the global citizen? Apolitical. Retrieved from: https://apolitical.co/en/solution_article/will-covid-19-be-the-end-of-the-global-citizen DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.11942.27208/1.
call girls in Mayapuri DELHI 🔝 >༒9540349809 🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
Will COVID19 be the end of Global Citizens?
1. 1
Opinion
6 min read • March 19, 2020
Will Covid-19 be the end of the global
citizen?
Borders are making a comeback — will they come down again once the virus
is defeated?
This article is written by Dr Igor Calzada, Senior Research Fellow, and Policy Adviser
position at the University of Oxford. He writes here in a personal capacity.
Over the last decades, globalisation has led to a new class of global citizens. While the access
to this global citizenship is still not spread evenly, many have enjoyed the freedom to move,
work, and travel with no limits.
However, this cosmopolitan globalisation rhetoric of a borderless world has been drastically
slowed down by Covid-19. This pandemic has introduced a new level of uncertainty in global
affairs and led many to question whether citizens will be able to continue enjoying the freedom
of movement once the crisis is over. Ironically, this resonates with the former UK prime
minister Theresa May’s popular quote in reference to the de facto Brexit, "If you believe you
are a citizen of the world, you are a citizen of nowhere".
Actually, we are now pandemic citizens, increasingly stuck inside closed nation-states
surrounded by contradictory new walls and old borders.
2. 2
A new world
Against this backdrop, it can be argued that borders still matter — at least as much as nations
do.
But the significance of nations and citizenship might be rapidly shifting through a sort of
pandemic adjustment, with different consequences for citizens depending on which country
they call home and their living conditions. In other words, and bluntly speaking, it seems
borders are making a temporary comeback affecting everyone directly but not all equally. We
are in the transition heading towards a new world order.
How should public servants and public authorities face this novel scenario?
What we might call a shared pandemic citizenship — where citizens worldwide share exactly
the same fear, uncertainty, and risks — is here to stay. This has different levels of techno-
political implications, as it intersects with another global trend — how algorithms are
increasingly shaping our lives.
In other words, I argue that the current pandemic crisis is pervasively related to data
governance issues, which exposes citizens’ vulnerability in a potential surveillance state
The responses to this pandemic emergency have been extremely different from case to case:
from the drastic lockdowns first seen in China, which were eventually followed by several
European countries including Italy and Spain, to more targeted measures like those
implemented by South Korea, Singapore, and Israel. Several governments have, in an attempt
to tackle the spread of the virus, begun operating, whether consciously or unwittingly, as
algorithmic nations. Algorithmic nations are driven by a new mode of governance where
algorithms such as blockchain, facial recognition, or data mining, and other technological tools
are a cornerstone. The downside is that these algorithms may negatively affect the ethical and
the democratic life of citizens.
We must therefore ask what are the democratic trade-offs of such algorithmic strategies? And
what are the consequences for citizens?
A pandemic and a data crisis converge
It appears that this pandemic crisis is forcing us towards an algorithmic crisis, in which the data
of citizens could be used for unfair or unethical purposes by governments or other
organisations.
In other words, I argue that the current pandemic crisis is pervasively related to data governance
issues, which exposes citizens’ vulnerability in a potential surveillance state. Do we have a
good understanding of how China has implemented its Social Credit Systems, or South Korea
the app to track and treat citizens? Why has Singapore had very few deaths and been able to
control so quickly the spread of infection? How will Israel use the data that people are
providing to the government to control the pandemic spread? Are all means justified to fight
the pandemic? Should governments protect citizens from being infected even if this might
mean establishing a new digital non-privacy norm? Will this pandemic crisis become an
algorithmic crisis, with serious side-effects for governments worldwide?
3. 3
To be clear, there is no evidence yet of governments misusing data collected to fight the
coronavirus for nefarious aims. But it is a systemic risk that we must not be blind to, as these
new data tools are incredibly potent.
Scientists worldwide are working continuously to experiment and design unprecedented
AI systems to (hopefully) detect the virus without violating democratic norms and while
protecting our fellow citizens. It is a massive mobilisation of knowledge that we cannot
easily dismiss
Global thinkers, such as the philosophers Yuval Noah Harari and Daniel Innerarity, constantly
advocate for transnational cooperation among algorithmic nations. According to them, the real
antidote to an epidemic is not segregation, but political leadership and cooperation.
In the near future, governments and civil servants may take different techno-political
approaches to how data could be used and exploited to tackle such an unprecedented situation.
Algorithmic nations of various political ideologies are already carving out different futures for
their citizens. Among the resilience strategies adopted by various governments, collective
intelligence should be considered to further avoid dystopian measures that could exacerbate
existing social inequalities and techno-political vulnerabilities among pandemic citizens.
Collective intelligence is created when people work together, often with the help of technology,
to mobilise a wider range of information, ideas, and insights to address a social innovation
challenge.
Surprisingly positive though, scientists worldwide are working continuously to experiment and
design unprecedented AI systems to (hopefully) detect the virus without violating democratic
norms and while protecting our fellow citizens. It is a massive mobilisation of knowledge that
we cannot easily dismiss.
Among the various resilience strategies stemming from social innovation that are worth
considering are predicting and modelling AI systems, citizens science projects with real-time
data, social media mining, open-source do-it-yourself (DIY) coronavirus detection tests, and
most importantly, sharing policies and strategies among algorithmic nations.
Ultimately, algorithmic nations should strive to manage this extraordinary situation by taking
advantage of the unprecedented masses of data now available, but without using it as a shortcut
to undermine democracy and the rights of our fellow pandemic citizens, wherever they are
located on the planet. — Igor Calzada
To share this article:
https://apolitical.co/en/solution_article/will-covid-19-be-the-end-of-the-global-citizen
To cite this article:
Calzada, I. (2020), Will Covid-19 be the end of the global citizen? Apolitical. Retrieved from:
https://apolitical.co/en/solution_article/will-covid-19-be-the-end-of-the-global-citizen DOI:
10.13140/RG.2.2.11942.27208/1.