Category Archives: Anatomy

‘Grey’s Anatomy’: Camilla Luddington Thanks Fans For the ‘Jo Love’ on Her Character’s Anniversary – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Its been more than 15 years sinceGreys Anatomypremiered on ABC. Many beloved characters have come and gone throughout the series, while a few others have stuck around. One actor who joined several seasons in but quickly earned the hearts of fans is Camilla Luddington. Discover what she said to fans on a special anniversary.

Luddingtons character is introduced as Jo Wilson. An intern, she grows close to Dr. Alex Karev. They discover that they have something in common both had difficult childhoods and spent time living out of their cars. Their initial friendship grows soon blooms into a romance.

BeforeGreys Anatomy, Luddington had appeared in a handful of projects. Aside from episodes of series such as proceduralCSI and soap operaDays of Our Lives, she was perhaps best known for portraying Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, in the Lifetime flickWilliam & Kate: The Movie.

Every character onGreys Anatomyhas a complicated past, but Jos is one that resonates strongest with fans. More is revealed after Alex proposes to her, and she shares that shes married to an abusive man she left, changing her name. Even after his death, it takes time before she and Alex are back on steady ground.

Then came seasons 15 and 16. Jo finds her birth mother, learning the truth about her birth father, and eventually checks into a mental health facility after dealing with depression. After she and Alex finally tie the knot, he leaves her to be with his ex-wife, Izzie, and raise their children. Many fans felt the character deserved better.

Luddingtons debut episode as Jo (in what was, at the time, a recurring role) was theGreys AnatomySeason 9 premiere. The episode first aired on Sept. 27, 2012. (Almost exactly one year later, on Sept. 26, 2013, the season 10 premiere her first episode as a starring cast member aired.)

In celebration of the eighth anniversary of the date, a fan on Twitter wrote, today 8 years ago jo wilson joined greys anatomy, @camilluddington thank you for playing this beloved character. The actor responded. Wow!!!!!!! I didnt know this! Filming my 9th season now and so thankful for the jo love all these years.

RELATED:Greys Anatomy: Why 1 Divisive Character Is Better Suited to Dealing With Coronavirus Than the Others

As Luddington noted,Greys AnatomySeason 17 is underway. Production on season 16 was shut down in early March 2020, amid precautions taken against the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. The planned 25-episode season was cut short, ending with episode 21, Put on a Happy Face.

While those working on the series have not revealed much about the season to come, showrunner Krista Vernoff said it will address coronavirus. Theyre talking about it as war a war that they were not trained for, she said in a conversation for theTelevision Academyin July 2020.

TheGreys AnatomySeason 17 premiere airs on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020, on ABC.

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'Grey's Anatomy': Camilla Luddington Thanks Fans For the 'Jo Love' on Her Character's Anniversary - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

New anatomy hub proposed by University of Sunderland – The Northern Echo

PLANS for a new facility to train the next generation of medical professionals have been lodged.

The University of Sunderland has applied for planning permission from Sunderland City Council to build the hub to the north of the science complex at the City Campus.

If approved, the centre will provide a state-of-the-art anatomy teaching resources for the universitys medical school.

The building is sidelined for the former site of the Darwin annex a cluster of buildings which have since been removed.

Dry anatomy facilities, currently located within the Dale building, would be relocated to the new site to provide a new integrated teaching facility.

This would include a flexible learning space for 30 students using both physical and digital anatomical models.

A wet anatomy room would provide teaching for up to 60 students where specimens would be dissected.

A planning statement outlines the benefits of the scheme, including bringing a vacant site back into use, job opportunities and providing an enhanced offering for students so the university could compete with others in the north.

Artist's impression of new medical facility at University of Sunderland, from Waterworks Road

It states: The proposed development would develop and enhance the current offering at the Universitys School of Medicine, enabling it to compete with other universities in the north, such as Newcastle, who currently offer this facility as part of their relevant teaching programmes.

The proposed development would offer medical students an outstanding environment for hands-on anatomical education, ensuring they graduate with the specialised skills required to make a meaningful change to the health of people in the north east region.

For surgical training, cadaveric anatomy is viewed as the gold standard.

Simulation cannot reproduce the variability and complexity of the human body; that said, modern simulation equipment is seen as a highly effective learning and teaching tool.

The proposed development would offer both methods, it is this blended approach that will be of the greatest benefit to students and place the University of Sunderland School of Medicine as one offering the latest and most effective teaching methods.

The facility would be licensed by the Human Tissue Authority with a new access created for private ambulances.

Surgeons and surgical trainees across the region are also expected to benefit from continual professional development (CPD) courses at the centre.

The planning statement goes on to say: Provision of CPD for surgeons would enhance the university and citys reputation, and also have a positive impact within the region by providing opportunities to establish centres of excellence in surgical training.

A final decision on the plans is expected by the end of November followingconsultation.

Comments can be made by writing to the councils planning department or visiting its online planning portal.

For more information, visit sunderland.gov.uk/online-applications and search planning reference: 20/01727/FUL

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New anatomy hub proposed by University of Sunderland - The Northern Echo

Anatomy of a wage subsidy | EUROPP – EUROPP – European Politics and Policy

Last week, the UK introduced a wage subsidy scheme that has strong similarities with the German Kurzarbeit (short work) programme. Bob Hanck, Toon Van Overbeke and Dustin Voss argue that much in the UKs approach is misguided. The German scheme works, they write, because it has three critical elements that are wholly or mostly absent in the UK. It would be a surprise, therefore, if it worked as intended even leaving aside the potentially prohibitive shift in costs from government to employers.

The new UK wage subsidy scheme (the Job Support Scheme or JSS), introduced by Chancellor Rishi Sunak on 24 September, tries to balance the cyclical short-term problems of an economic downturn with the longer-term structural problems of adjusting to the emerging new economy. As our colleague Nick Barr points out, there are many problems with that balance. But leaving that aside, the policies are likely to be problematic for a set of deeper-rooted, institutional reasons.

The new scheme is copied almost verbatim from the existing German Kurzarbeit programme that has become something like the gold standard in this area. But crucially the performance of such schemes does not just hinge on how sensible the policies themselves are; they are also a result of the wider institutional context in which they are introduced. Three elements in particular seem vital for the success of this type of wage subsidy scheme.

Carrots and sticks aka incentives

The carrot: German employers want to safeguard their large investments in sophisticated workforce skills, while employers in the UK have little investment to protect: Most education and training is paid for by government and the individual. The stick: German employers are forced to negotiate large and expensive social plans with trade unions, while British employers can more or less unilaterally fire and pay out a ludicrous notice period (one week per year worked above two years, else zilch).

German employers thus face very strong incentives to adopt Kurzarbeit, almost regardless of the cost, while British employers face the opposite incentives. That helps understand why, as the Resolution Foundation has calculated, the scheme is simply too expensive for most employers in the UK. Those in the real world outside No 11 think it is a poor scheme because it is too expensive and contains very few incentives for employers to pick it up. In light of the carrot point above: the policy makes little sense for employers, unless they were going to do something similar on their own account anyway and can now have the government pay part of that.

German company governance

In the company, where it is implemented, the German scheme is governed by employer and works council or trade union (or other workforce) representatives, who police the fairness, correctness and fraud in its implementation. That works because this form of micro-corporatism is deeply embedded in a thick web of long-established mutual agreements, expectations and trust (supported and shaped by vetoes that the workforce can exercise in particular areas of company organisation). Calling this a bit weaker in the UK might qualify as a euphemism.

Macro-corporatism

At a political level, the Kurzarbeit scheme is in many ways an outcome of deeply embedded tripartite arrangements a form of political exchange that assign rights and responsibilities to business/employers and labour and are often financially and institutionally supported, instigated or steered by government. Participating in Kurzarbeit is therefore almost a moral obligation for employers not because German employers are fundamentally nice people but because they understand the strategic long-term benefits of having a stable, functioning macro-level governance arrangement beyond the market. Such a settlement, if it ever existed, disappeared in the Thatcherite hurricane of the 1980s.

Combined, these three points show why importing such a policy and expecting the same outcome as elsewhere is questionable at best. That might help explain why few observers have actually seen much good in it. As the days go on, we expect an avalanche of criticism of precisely those details that make the whole JSS a big mess. The opening shots were fired in the FT and the Guardian over the past few days. Added to the more fundamental critiques here, it would be a surprise to us if the scheme survived in its current form.

Note: This article gives the views of theauthors, not the position of EUROPP European Politics and Policy or the London School of Economics. Featured image credit:Number 10 (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

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Anatomy of a wage subsidy | EUROPP - EUROPP - European Politics and Policy

Plans submitted for anatomy teaching facility to train the next generation of medics at the University of Sunderland – Sunderland Echo

Artistic impression of the facility

The proposed hub will be based to the north of the University of Sunderlands Science Complex at the City Campus.

Plans were verified by Sunderland City Councils planning department earlier this week.

If approved, the centre will provide a state-of-the-art anatomy teaching resource for the universitys medical school.

The building is sidelined for the former site of the Darwin annex a cluster of buildings which have since been removed.

Dry anatomy facilities, currently located within the Dale building, would be relocated to the new site to provide a new integrated teaching facility.

This would include a flexible learning space for 30 students using both physical and digital anatomical models.

A wet anatomy room would also provide teaching for up to 60 students where specimens would be dissected.

A planning statement outlines the benefits of the scheme, including bringing a vacant site back into use, job opportunities and providing an enhanced offering for students.

The statement reads: The proposed development would develop and enhance the current offering at the Universitys School of Medicine, enabling it to compete with other universities in the north, such as Newcastle, who currently offer this facility as part of their relevant teaching programmes.

The proposed development would offer medical students an outstanding environment for hands-on anatomical education, ensuring they graduate with the specialised skills required to make a meaningful change to the health of people in the north east region.

For surgical training, cadaveric anatomy is viewed as the gold standard.

Simulation cannot reproduce the variability and complexity of the human body; that said, modern simulation equipment is seen as a highly effective learning and teaching tool.

The proposed development would offer both methods, it is this blended approach that will be of the greatest benefit to students and place the University of Sunderland School of Medicine as one offering the latest and most effective teaching methods.

It would be licensed by the Human Tissue Authority with a new access created for private ambulances.

Surgeons and surgical trainees across the region are also expected to benefit from continual professional development (CPD) courses at the centre.

The planning statement goes on to say: Provision of CPD for surgeons would enhance the university and citys reputation, and also have a positive impact within the region by providing opportunities to establish centres of excellence in surgical training.

A final decision on the plans is expected by the end of November following consultation.

Comments can be made by writing to the councils planning department or visiting its online planning portal.

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Plans submitted for anatomy teaching facility to train the next generation of medics at the University of Sunderland - Sunderland Echo

‘Grey’s Anatomy’: This Minor Side-Character Has Been in Every Season & Is the True Favorite of Diehard Fans – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Throughout the 16 seasons ofGreys Anatomy, many characters have come and gone. Most recently, Alex Karev (Justin Chambers) departed the show, and fans were devastated. However, there is one character who is still a series regular that casual fans often forget about.

WithGreys Anatomycoming into its 17th season on the air, there are only a few series regulars left who have been present since day one. Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo) is always the star fans think of first since the show is named after her. She was married and widowed throughout her time on the long-running medical drama. In the upcoming season, we may see her find love again.

RELATED: Greys Anatomy Fans Can Finally Mark Their Calendars for the Season 17 Premiere

Miranda Bailey (Chandra Wilson) is another character who has outlasted all the rest. Her residents hated her in the early days of the show, but she quickly became another fan-favorite. In the latest season, she had a miscarriage but bonded with a teenage foster boy she later takes home.

Fans worried that James Pickens Jr. was about to depart the show in season 16 when his character, Richard Webber, nearly died. Instead, in the finale, he finally had life-saving surgery and will return for season 17.

Bokhee (Kathy C. An ) is a scrub nurse at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital and is often featured in most surgeries. She isnt a prominent cast member and was uncredited until a recent episode because she typically has no lines. According to Greys Anatomy Fandom, An is a scrub nurse in real life and continues to work on open-heart surgeries in Los Angeles.

RELATED:Greys Anatomy Fans Predict Which Character Will Exit the Show in Season 17

Nurse BokHee appears in every season of Greys Anatomy for a total of 257 episodes, according toIMDb. She also appeared in Private Practice when she assisted during Erica Warners surgery at Seattle Grace Mercy West Hospital. The nurse also managed to make it through every round of firing during the merger with Mercy West.

Ans character is Amelia Shepherds (Caterina Scorsone) favorite scrub nurse. She also assisted Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh) while she was operating on Derek Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey) during the shooting season six.

Does she know shes basically idol-worshipped in certain corners of the internet? one fan wrote about BokHee onReddit.

Other fans chimed in that they love the scrub nurse and hope to see more of her this season.

I want a Bokhee episode! another fan added. With her history and background!

Viewers call her a treasure and love that the masses go wild for BokHee.

Many fans comment that they would love an episode dedicated to the scrub nurse and her history at the hospital.

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'Grey's Anatomy': This Minor Side-Character Has Been in Every Season & Is the True Favorite of Diehard Fans - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Grey’s Anatomy: Derek Shepherd Vs. Mark Sloan – Which Character Is The Best? – Screen Rant

McDreamy and McSteamy, also known as Derek Shepherd and Mark Sloan, are two fan-favorite characters from Grey's Anatomy but which is the best?

Greys Anatomy has brought television two of the most iconic characters in hospital drama TV: McDreamy and McSteamy, or rather Derek Shepherd and Mark Sloan. Just like night and day, these two are the complete opposites of each other while also being best friends at the same time. Whats not to love?

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: 10 Hidden Details About Derek Shepherd That Everyone Missed

With these two comes a series-long debate of which one is the better guy. Derek is dreamy and devoted whereas Mark is steamy and confident. Between the two, it was hard to pick which one Meredith should have gotten with, and its even hard now to decide which guy people would bring home to Mom for Thanksgiving. So which one is the best, Derek Shepherd or Mark Sloan?

The beauty of Mark wasnt because of his good looks or his tall stature, but also because he was just so carefree. Mark was the comic relief of the show before any of the interns came along, and he did it so well. From hilariously flirting with Meredith to taking jabs at the other residents, Mark was the life of the show when a gunman roamed the hospital or explosions happened outside.

Its a beautiful day to save lives.

With almost every episode, this quote reminded audiences that Derek was an overall great and optimistic character. His passion for what he does was told through his optimism, whether it be through that quote or the tenacity he had during his surgeries to make sure his patients stayed alive through the night. Derek believed in love, second chances, and defied the odds.

Mark was many things - sometimes a bad best friend, a player, an arrogant surgeon, but he never self-sabotaged as horribly as Derek. While Derek was going through the failure of his clinical trial, he not only punched Mark to oblivion in the middle of the hospital for everyone to see, but he also pushed Meredith away and almost ended their relationship.

RELATED:Grey's Anatomy: 5 Times Derek Shepherd Was An Overrated Character (& 5 Times He Was Underrated)

Between Mark and Derek, Mark always was the one that kept it together when life was falling down around him. Mark always knew what and who he was while Derek struggled to keep it together at times. This alone solidifies himself as one of the best.

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Grey's Anatomy: Derek Shepherd Vs. Mark Sloan - Which Character Is The Best? - Screen Rant

Camilla Luddington announces being pregnant, but will Grays Anatomy write it in? – Gruntstuff

Grays Anatomy vet Camilla Luddington introduced on Monday that she is pregnant along with her second little one which, if the ABC serial had been to write it in, positive would throw soon-to-be-ex husband Alex a curve ball!

Stemming from unique forged member Justin Chambers abrupt parting of how with Grays, the March 5 episode revealed through a sequence of handwritten letters from the MIA doc that characters learn to themselves on-screen that he had reconnected with former love Izzie and was now residing along with her in Kansas, together with their 5-year-old twins, Eli and Alexis.

Alex wrote to his spouse Jo that it felt like no time had handed when he reconnected with Izzie after years of silence. And if it had simply been a case of him lacking his first spouse, thatd be one factor. But shed had his children, through the eggs Alex had fertilized again when Izzie was combating most cancers. I want to provide these children the household you and I by no means had, he advised Jo. After I advised you I beloved you, I meant it, but Izzie has our youngsters. Ergo, the enclosed, signed divorce papers. #Ouch #StillTooSoon

As entertaining as it could be to invest that Grays will write in Luddingtons second being pregnant (after capturing round her first one, throughout Season 13), and thus give start to a bouncing bundle of dramatic irony, the very fact is that the present has stored hidden the actress being pregnant for months already, Luddington revealed. So it would seem that ship has sailed?

Luddington and her husband, Matthew Alan, have a daughter, Hayden, who turns three in April.

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Camilla Luddington announces being pregnant, but will Grays Anatomy write it in? - Gruntstuff

Not even Fall Guys devs can agree on the anatomy of the titular beans – Polygon

Fall Guys has been a smash success, and absolutely everyone loves the silly beans and the way they swarm across ridiculous stages in pursuit of a goal. Theres just enough in each level, like cotton candy landscapes and giant, silly billboards, to ignite fans imagination about the world. And they want answers to the difficult questions. Specifically, how do these Fall Guys live, and what, exactly, do they look like?

Well, it turns out that not even the developers at Mediatronic are sure, especially in light of several recent tweets.

Senior concept artist Tudor Morris provided a sketch on Twitter, which suggests that every single Fall Guy is stuffed with a giant, spooky skeleton. I dont like this very much! Morris wrote the following explanation on his Instagram, which may either soothe or further unsettle players.

You have have options for how you interpret this, but I refuse to comment to elaborate:

1) This was a lunchtime sketch that has no meaning and was done as a joke

2) This is a canonical representation of whats inside a fall guy, we knew from the start that they werent as marketable like this so we gave them nice little cuddly suits.

The important thing to bear in mind is that, whatever the interpretation you take away, they are very happy little beans.

Well! Its good to know that these beans are happy, because it simply wouldnt do if they were miserable while they chased eggs and jumped on brightly colored hexagons. Meanwhile, principal concept artist Ash Kerins has a much sunnier view on the anatomy of each little bean, which also showed up on Twitter.

The developers arent the only one who have speculated about the origin and creation of the Fall Guys. Fan artists online are also up to the task, coming up with many ways that these beans are assembled and prepared for a life of eternal platforming combat. What if theyre not born... but created?

Another Tweet suggests that the Fall Guys could be like towering mechas, ready for combat.

Even the games publisher, Devolver Digital, got in on the wild speculation train by quote-tweeting a piece of art back in August. Devolver quote tweeted a gif of the Fall Guys being ground into the goo that shows up on maps like Slime Climb.

This is canon, they wrote, with an air of finality that they have not earned. Please respect our decision.

We may never know the truth behind these mysterious beans or why theyre so hungry for crowns. Even Mediatronic and Devolver seem to disagree with several key points of this games mythos. Perhaps the upcoming season 2 will answer some questions, but it might just increase the mystery.

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Not even Fall Guys devs can agree on the anatomy of the titular beans - Polygon

Long Trends and Disruption: The Anatomy of the ‘Post World’ of the Covid-19 Crisis – Valdai Discussion Club

What will be the economic architecture of the world after the Covid-19 crisis? This question involves understanding the major trends at work for twenty years now.

The world that will emerge from this crisis will be marked by these major trends, which, for some, will be reinforced by this crisis. However, this crisis has created too specific disruptions, in particular in the field of transport and energy. It has also provoked an awareness of the centrality of sovereignty, and in particular of economic sovereignty. Finally, the economic and monetary policies that have been put in place to combat the economic effects of the epidemic and of containment will have long-term consequences on international financial balances.

An acceleration of the change of the world?

Since 2000, we have witnessed the rise of an Asian bloc to the detriment of what we might call the Western bloc, that is to say the United States, the European Union and the United States. Japan. This Asian bloc is heterogeneous, as is the Western bloc. In each of these bloc politics is the main factor of homogeneity. But, these blocs also correspond to an economic reality: that of the countries of old industrialization against the countries, which it is better to call new industrialization than emerging ones.

Graph 1

Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook database

During his long tenure as Prime Minister of Japan, Abe managed to formulate his own foreign policy strategy and take measures to implement it. In addition, the Abe administration was characterised by an unprecedented concentration of power in the hands of the prime minister, his advisers and the administration. The high stability of power and great foreign policy activity made Abe one of the most recognisable and respected politicians in the international arena.

In 2000, the China-India-Russia combined represented only 15% of world GDP, while the United States, the European Union and Japan combined weighed more than 47%, or three times as much. In 2020, the two blocks are tied at around 31.5%. If we take into account the immediate effects of the Covid-19 crisis, this movement is even expected to grow. The IMF has made forecasts which indicate that China and emerging countries should recover much faster from the shock of this crisis than the so-called "advanced" countries, ie countries of former industrialization. The world should see the shift to Asia amplify in the coming years.

Graph 2

Source: IMF staff estimates

The death of oil has been greatly exaggerated (bcc, Mark Twain)

The Covid-19 pandemic has had a profound influence on the energy market and on oil production. The persistence of the pandemic means that air transport, among other things, will not return to its 2019 level before, no doubt, 2024. This implies a weak demand for kerosene as estimated by the International Energy Agency Forecasts of global oil demand and post-crisis economic growth are determined by different assumptions. In the optimistic scenario, there is a rapid economic recovery in a more or less flattened "V" shape in the first half of 2021, but the demand for oil does not fully return to the pre-pandemic trend. In the more pessimistic scenario, oil demand will not reach 2019 levels until 2023, and its growth will remain well below the pre-pandemic trend. The current evolution of the pandemic suggests that we are closer to this pessimistic scenario. These two scenarios also assume that zero-emission vehicles will represent 60% of new vehicle sales by 2040, because investments are high in these technologies. Therefore, they both forecast a slowdown in demand for oil to peak in the mid-2030s at around 105-108 Mb/d. What will be the consequence?

In the medium term, OPEC will have to manage the probable return of part of the 5.7 Mb / d of unused production in OPEC countries (Venezuela, Iran and Libya) and non-OPEC countries (Syria and Yemen). ). OPEC will also have to deal with the resumption of US hydrocarbon production (particularly shale oil), a recovery that may be slow due to falling investment, as demand and the price of oil rise. US production of hydrocarbons has fallen by more than 2 billion barrels / days, due to the closure of existing wells, reduced storage capacity and reduced demand.

The impact of Covid-19 on oil demand will therefore be profound, particularly in the event of a deep and long recession associated with a protracted pandemic. Without aggressive intervention by OPEC, the average crude oil price could thus remain below $ 50 / barrel until mid-2022. During the second half of this decade, supply and demand are expected to move closely towards equilibrium as non-OPEC production, especially from Russia, begins to decline and US hydrocarbon production reaches a low. tray. The price of oil is expected to rise to around $ 80-90 / barrel (optimistic scenario) or $ 70-80 / barrel (pessimistic scenario), even without OPEC intervention.

As we can see, however, despite all voluntarist proclamations one can hear here and there, oil will remain a major source of energy for at least the next thirty years.

The return of economic sovereignty

A more direct change brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic is the realization of the importance of economic sovereignty. Of course, a number of countries, China, Russia, but also the United States and India, were acutely aware of the importance of this sovereignty. The European Union, for its part, had adopted a very negligent attitude on this subject. The strong disruption of international trade caused by the pandemic caused a real shock on this point. Of course, there is no question of returning to more or less self-sufficient economies. But, the economic, social, and even strategic damage caused by free trade policies are globally more taken into account today.

This will accelerate the return of nations and the crisis of multilateralism that we could already observe. The economy is once again becoming a breeding ground for strategy. Through the policy of economic sanctions, which the United States has used and abused since well before the election of Donald Trump, we are witnessing an acceleration of the fragmentation of the world economic space. American pressure on Huawei, or on the Chinese social network "TikTok" is an example. De-globalization had passed from the stage of possibility to that of concrete fact; with the effects of the pandemic it will pass from that of fact to that of major fact.

This return to economic sovereignty induces the great revenge of politics over "technology", the triumph of decisions over the automaticity of standards. However, " technology" is embodied today mainly in economics and finance. The pandemic heralds the return of sovereignty, and being sovereign is above all having the ability to decide. The countries will then be referred to logic of bilateral relations, or even to regional logic. It will then be necessary to seek allies.

The questioning of the "global" character of the companies linked to the INTERNET, the desire of several countries to build their "digital sovereignty" is an example of the struggle that is looming for economic sovereignty. This resurgence of politics does not mean that, in our societies, certain spaces are not governed by the technical order, and that there are spaces dominated by technical legitimacy. But, these dimensions will now become second in relation to the political, which will recover its rights.

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Long Trends and Disruption: The Anatomy of the 'Post World' of the Covid-19 Crisis - Valdai Discussion Club