Debate & Current Affairs Camille Goodman Debate & Current Affairs Camille Goodman

NEWS DIGEST: What We’ve Missed In the Wake of COVID-19

While the world media stage fights to point the spotlight on the current global pandemic, it is only natural that other stories find themselves sat in the wings. In such challenging times, we have a responsibility to remain informed about wider world news – although it may seem like all conflict, other political issues, climate changes, and technological advancements have come to a halt for COVID-19, this is very much not the case. See our current news digest on things happening in the world that aren’t related to COVID-19.

While the world media stage fights to point the spotlight on the current global pandemic, it is only natural that other stories find themselves sat in the wings. Despite the increasing levels of anxiety, we have to remind ourselves that even as the world starts to slow down, the picture painted by current tabloid news is not entirely complete: reality does not only consist of widely reported news. In such challenging times, we have a responsibility to remain informed about wider world news – although it may seem like all conflict, other political issues, climate changes, and technological advancements have come to a halt for COVID-19, this is very much not the case. See our current news digest on things happening in the world that aren’t related to COVID-19 below.

Female First in Politics

POLITICS: A Female First in Politics

As a new Labour Party leader was elected on 5 April, so was a new Shadow Chancellor and for the first time ever, a woman has been elected to fulfil this role. Oxford educated Anneliese Dodds will be the first female to hold either a ministerial or shadow ministerial position. This news follows previous Shadow party leader, Jeremy Corbyn’s announcement that he was stepping down from the position. Having been elected for the House of Commons for the first time in 2017 as an MP for Oxford East, Dodds has worked in social policy for many years now. She listed her interests as housing, the NHS, social care and education.

Tech News

TECH: EU Releases New Economy Plan to Target Tech Giants

In recent news, the EU has launched a controversial strategy to circumvent the ability of large scale technology producers to reduce the shelf-life of the latest products. This new strategy will also aim to ensure that all relevant information is made available to customers relating to how repairable their products are. This is hoped to help reduce ‘tech waste’, which directly benefits the environment, and reduce the number of customers living in the dark about the repairability and recyclability of their devices. Specifically, the EU has stated that it plans to offer customers a ‘right to repair’ on computers and smartphones, a right that currently does not exist. The EU is optimistic that this will halve municipal waste by 2030 and simultaneously remove the ability of large technology manufacturers to withhold information from customers regarding their devices. 

COVID-19 Environmental Crisis

ENVIRONMENT: The Climate Crisis Continues

Despite many news stories detailing how much greener the planet is as a direct knock-on effect of COVID-19, do not let the surge of observable wildlife fool you. Unfortunately, the ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland are still melting. It is reported that they are melting six times faster than in 1990. A team of scientists from the University of Leeds have been reviewing sea level changes and the variation in volume of water in the sea for over three decades now, and their work has not stopped for COVID. In 2019, it was discovered that the melting process of ice sheets within Greenland specifically is accelerating at a faster rate. As the COVID crisis highlights the quick-term effects of stopping the large-scale movement of trade and persons world-wide, studies like this remind us of the perhaps irreversible long-term effects our up-to-now unquestioned lifestyle has had on our planet.

Olympic Games News

SPORT: Tokyo Olympics Delayed by a Year – But What Can We Expect of GB?

It was announced on 23 March that the summer Tokyo Olympic Games previously scheduled to take place in 2020 have been postponed until 2021. Given the UK’s historic performance in the last cycle of the Games, at Rio in 2016, where we became the first competing nation ever, having hosted the previous Games, to win more medals in the following cycle than in our home cycle. Given various uncertainties, data analysis from Gracenote expect GB to rank 7th in the overall medal table. This comes from news that GB currently have a reduced number of athletes training in sports that have, in previous Games, helped us to win many medals. For instance, gymnastics, track cycling, and rowing. This said, there is only so much that data analysis companies can predict, and the fever and excitement on the Olympic Games certainly comes from the unpredictable nature of the outcome of so many well-loved events. While we may not be home to a Usain Bolt, or a Michael Phelps, it is undeniable that team GB will achieve many podium finishes. 

Uplifting New Stories Women

UPLIFTING NEWS: Celebrating Remarkable Women

We should also endeavour to seek out news that inspires us during admittedly trying times. National Geographic released a trailer for the upcoming documentary on Jane Goodall, set to premiere on 22 April. The film follows the life of Goodall, an activist and scientist who continues to work to spread the message of hope for the world. In these times of crisis, it is important to remember the inspiring work of those around us. In the trailer, Goodall reminds us that we can each make a difference to contribute towards a better world every day. 

This should act as a reminder of the power of small acts of kindness in difficult times, and let it also implore us all to cast a light onto the remainder of world news left in the shadow of the COVID crisis; and, most importantly, to find, and indeed share, bits of inspiration and happiness where we can.

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Camille Goodman Camille Goodman

NEWS DIGEST: Pandemic, Populism & Power

In an age of pandemic, right-wing populism, fake news and environmental chaos, it is imperative that we keep abreast of what is going on in this volatile world we live in. In this news digest, journalist, Georgia, distills key happenings in the UK and the world at large, and provides suggestions of points of analysis in reaction to those events for you to consider and digest.

Digest and analysis by Georgia: Georgia is an English Language & Literature, University of Oxford graduate, and holds a Newspaper Journalism Masters from City, University of London. Georgia has written over 20 news reports and features articles on a range of subjects, which can be seen on her online journalism blog: https://georgiaheneage.journoportfolio.com/

In an age of pandemic, right-wing populism, fake news and environmental chaos, it is imperative that we keep abreast of what is going on in this volatile world we live in. In this news digest, I distill key happenings in the UK and the world at large, and provide suggestions of points of analysis in reaction to those events for you to consider and digest.

World News

Beirut explosion

  • At least 137 people killed in massive port explosion in Beirut, Lebanon

  • The result of ignoring repeated warnings of a stash of ammonium nitrate stored on a Russian-owned ship that was once described as a “floating bomb”

  • Ongoing investigation into why highly explosive materials were housed just metres away from residential neighbourhoods

  • Aspect of governmental negligence and continuing frustration at Lebanon’s political class

  • Explosion played into an ongoing financial crisis in Lebanon, with serious economic damage

Analysis: do governments pay enough attention to repeated warnings about these kinds of highly explosive materials? How important a role did the Lebanese government play in this? Are these kinds of explosions usually linked to politics? Parallels to be made between this scenario and the Chernobyl nuclear explosion, where post-cold-war Soviet Union politics were integral to the event.

Current Affairs For Students

Facebook blocks fake news post from Trump for first time

  • Facebook has blocked a video post from president Trump, in which he falsely claims that children are “almost immune from Covid-19”

  • This is the first time Facebook has removed a post from Trump’s page which they deem to be spreading false information

  • This is the latest in a series of actions taken by social media platforms against the president for spreading false information, hate speech and threats of violence

  • Social media platforms have been heavily criticised for making allowances of the president’s breaking its content rules

Analysis: are social media platforms beginning to take more responsibility in halting the spread of fake news during coronavirus? Are they beginning to take a stand against politicians? Will this play an important role in the upcoming presidential campaign, which is increasingly reliant on social media? How will this compare to the 2016 campaign, which was reliant on accessing and manipulating a voter base via Facebook?

Fake News

China’s growing power over the world stage

  • Since China’s encroachment on Hong Kong’s security laws under the “one country, two systems” model earlier this year, international concerns have been raised over China’s growing economic and military power

  • Technological monopoly: China’s power over the technological market is growing, but the UK decided last month to strip Huawei from its 5G phone networks by 2027

  • Military encroachment: with the world distracted by the pandemic, China’s military has encroached on its neighbour’s territories on numerous fronts, including a bloody brawl between Chinese and Indian soldiers along the disputed Himalayan border, reflecting a frightening new policy of confrontation and military aggression

  • Freedom of speech: China imprisons and tortures citizens for speaking out against the state and the way they have handled the coronavirus or Hong Kong

  • Human rights: New footage has been revealed which shows the brutality of the Chinese government’s detention camps, where they have singled as many as 1.8 million Uighurs (a Muslim ethnic minority) into mass detention, forced labour and torture

  • According to these new reports, inmates are targeted by Chinese government propaganda (often played over loudspeakers) to suppress their group’s religion and culture

  • America v China: Earlier this week, Trump banned any US transactions with the Chinese companies that own TikTok and WeChat and has said that the US must take “aggressive action” in the interest of national security

Analysis: The UK’s decision to strip Huawei from its network plays into a wider UK-China dispute, but is the UK doing enough to halter the progression of Chinese power over the world stage? Does Brexit mean that we are in a weak position to do this? Does a Conservative government, with invested interest in Chinese billionaire companies, take a correct moral stance against China’s encroachment on human rights?

Are we witnessing a situation that Orwell envisaged in 1984, where the Chinese government controls every aspect of civil life, including your thoughts and belief systems? Is our democratic system in the West equipped to tackle China’s unique communist political system?

News Digest

Coronavirus 

The super-spreaders of misinformation during Covid-19 and the “infodemic”

  • Social media platforms have played a huge role in permitting the spread of misinformation during this coronavirus period

  • Most recently, theories which connect 5G and coronavirus from a few alternative doctors (which claim that 5G is dangerous to our health, there are harmful ingredients in vaccines and conspiracies surrounding the origins of the virus) have garnered millions of followers, likes and shares on Facebook

  • Authoritarian leaders across the world, such as in China, Turkey and Thailand, have harnessed the “infodemic” (fake news epidemic) as an opportunity to silence dissenting opinion and replace it with their own version of events, which is often fake

  • Many leaders are using such “misinformation” to stifle freedom of expression, the rights of citizens, and to intimidate journalists and medical staff who speak out against problems within healthcare systems and concerns over governmental corruption

Analysis: Has the coronavirus pandemic issued in a new fake news epidemic? Is the UK government doing enough to halt the spread of misinformation about the virus? Is the UK government as apolitical as we might like to think? How has the internet affected the way we consume news about the pandemic?

COVID-19 Fake News

Impact of Covid-19 on arts & culture

  • The pandemic has had an unprecedented effect on the UK’s world-leading performing arts sector: theatres and music venues, including the Edinburgh Fringe festival this August, are struggling to reopen amidst a huge economic fallout and requires urgent funding to stay alive

  • The UK government has now pledged 2.25m to keep music venues afloat, but according to the Guardian, the live music industry added £4.5bn to the UK economy last year and provides 210,000 jobs, but up to 50% of the workforce are now facing unemployment.

  • The Royal Albert Hall is apparently “months away from going bust” and has never faced a closure like since in its 150 year history

Analysis: what will be the long-term effects of Covid-19 on culture? Can the arts withstand the economic fallout from the pandemic? Are the new cultural forms which are emerging, such as new virtual technologies and experiences, the same or of similar quality to before? Has the pandemic increased the diversity of audiences, through increased accessibility?

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