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This volume explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health, safety, and socioeconomic well-being of community residents of selected countries around the world. It is built on an overarching framework of studying community well-being, applied here to the analyses of one of the most significant crises of our time. Most important are the lessons learned from the experiences in these countries - including insights and recommendations on how to mitigate future pandemics. Building on years of research, each chapter is written by an accomplished scholar with interests and expertise on…mehr
This volume explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health, safety, and socioeconomic well-being of community residents of selected countries around the world. It is built on an overarching framework of studying community well-being, applied here to the analyses of one of the most significant crises of our time. Most important are the lessons learned from the experiences in these countries - including insights and recommendations on how to mitigate future pandemics. Building on years of research, each chapter is written by an accomplished scholar with interests and expertise on various assessments of community well-being development in the country of study. The authors share cases and analyses, and highlight failures and successes; they offer sound policy recommendations on how to restore the health, safety, and multidimensional wellness of community residents, and how to decrease the likelihood and impact of future crises. Some of the policy recommendations in this multi-country compendium can be used to assist crisis prevention and recovery, beyond pandemics. The volume shows how the lessons learned and shared from community responses to the pandemic can provide critical and useful policy insights to shape best practices in mitigating other disasters like hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, tornadoes, wars, riots, acts of domestic and international terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and industrial accidents. This is a must-read for researchers across the social sciences, health sciences, and management studies, and for government and non-government professionals involved in community health and well-being.
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Autorenporträt
Clifford (Cliff) J. Shultz, II, is Professor and Charles H. Kellstadt Chair of Marketing in the Quinlan School of Business at Loyola University Chicago and an International Fellow of the Harvard-Fulbright Economics Teaching Program. He received his PhD in social and organizational psychology from Columbia University. Prior to joining Loyola, Professor Shultz held an appointment as Professor and Marley Foundation Chair in the W. P. Carey School of Business and Morrison School of Agribusiness. He also has taught at the Columbia University Graduate Business School, University of Zagreb, University of Rijeka, Ho Chi Minh City Economics University and College of Marketing, Swedish School of Economics, University of Western Australia, University of Munich, etc. Professor Shultz has expertise on marketing, policy, and sustainable development in transforming economies, particularly the transitioning/recovering economies of Southeast Asia, the Balkans, Latin America and the Middle East. Dr. Shultz has served two terms as Editor of the Journal of Macromarketing, as President of the International Society of Markets and Development, President of the Macromarketing Society, and is currently on editorial and policy boards of several international journals. He has over 250 publications in various academic journals and other scholarly outlets. His books and special volumes include Consumption in Marketizing Economies (JAI Press); Marketing Contributions to Democratization and Socioeconomic Development (Sveucilina knjinica); Marketing and Consumer Behavior in East and South-East Asia (McGraw-Hill); Handbook of Markets and Economies: East Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia and New Zealand (Routledge). Professor Shultz has received several awards for his scholarly contributions, including Fulbright appointments, fellowships, outstanding article and best paper awards, honors for outstanding contributions to research, numerous grants, faculty researcher of the year, faculty teacher of the year, etc. He has been invited to lecture, to make research presentations at universities and research institutes, and to counsel governments, NGOs and businesses on six continents. Don R. Rahtz is a marketing /marketing communications researcher (Ph.D., Virginia Tech) and is the J.S. Mack Professor of Marketing at William and Mary School of Business. His expertise is in integrated marketing communication programs, international competitive intelligence, cultural intelligence, marketing research, survey methodology, analysis, situational awareness, and market assessment. He has had a particular interest in Quality of Life (QoL), environmental issues, economic sustainable development, transitional economies, business/community interface evaluation, and health systems. He has served as the Editor of The Marketing Educator and on the Editorial Review Boards of The Journal of Health Care Marketing and The Journal of Business Psychology. Presently, he serves on the Editorial Review Boards of the Journal of Macromarketing and The Journal of Applied Research in Quality of Life. He is a regular reviewer for many of the international conferences and journals in the marketing (e.g., Academy of Marketing Science) and quality of life areas (e.g. Social Indicators Research). He has traveled and worked extensively in the developing and transitional world and acted as a consultant to businesses in both the public and private sectors concerning the above topics. Professor Rahtz has a number of publications on these topics in books, academic journals, and the popular press. His work has appeared in The Journal of Advertising, Journal of Health Care Marketing, Journal of Macromarketing, International Journal of Research in Marketing, Psychology and Marketing, Journal of Business Research, The Journalof Applied Research in Quality of Life and Social Indicators Research. He has been active in promoting the Quality of Life (QOL) field of study in a variety of disciplines and is a founding member of the International Society for Quality of Life Studies (ISQOLS) where he has served on the Executive Board in a number of positions and had served as the Vice-President of Programs for over a decade. In 2010 he received the Distinguished Service Award from ISQOLS for his dedicated service to the organization and field. He has served continuously as a Board Member of the Macromarketing Society of nearly two decades and served as the Vice-President of Programs for the society for a decade. He has a long relationship with the International Society of Markets and Development (ISMD) and currently serves on their board. M. Joseph (Joe) Sirgy is a management psychologist (Ph.D., UMass) and the Virginia Tech Real Estate Professor of Marketing at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech). He has published extensively in the area of marketing, business ethics, and quality of life (QOL). He co-founded the International Society for Quality-of-Life Studies (ISQOLS) in 1995, served as its Executive Director/Treasurer from 1995 to 2011, and as Development Co-Director (2011-present). In 1998, he received the Distinguished Fellow Award from ISQOLS. In 2003, ISQOLS honored him as the Distinguished QOL Researcher for research excellence and a record of lifetime achievement in QOL research. He also served as President of the Academy of Marketing Science (2002-04) from which he received the Distinguished Fellow Award in the early 1990s and the Harold Berkman Service Award in 2007 (lifetime achievement award for serving the marketing professoriate). In the early 2000s, he helped co-found the Macromarketing Society and the Community Indicators Consortium and has served as a board member of these two professional associations. He co-founded the journal Applied Research in Quality of Life, the official journal of the International Society for Quality-of-Life Studies, in 2005, and has served as co-founding editor (1995-present). He also served editor of the QOL section in the Journal of Macromarketing (1995-2016). He received the Virginia Tech's Pamplin Teaching Excellence Award/Holtzman Outstanding Educator Award and University Certificate of Teaching Excellence in 2008. In 2010, ISQOLS honored him for excellence and lifetime service to the society. In 2010 he won the Best Paper Award in the Journal of Happiness Studies for his theory of the balanced life; in 2011, he won the Best Paper Award in the Journal of Travel Research for his goal theory of leisure travel satisfaction. In 2012 he was awarded the EuroMed Management Research Award for outstanding achievements and groundbreaking contributions to well-being and quality-of-life research. In 2019 the Macromarketing Society honored him with the Robert W. Nason Award for extraordinary and sustained contributions to the field of Macromarketing. He is currently serving as editor-in-chief of the Journal of Macromarketing (2020-present). He also was the editor of ISQOLS/Springer book series on International Handbooks in QOL (2008-15), Community QOL Indicators: Best Cases (2004-15), Applied Research in QOL: Best Practices (2008-12). He is currently the co-editor of Springer book series on Human Well-Being and Policy Making (2015-present).
Inhaltsangabe
Part 1.- 1. Introduction: background and context.- Part 2: Country experiences and best practices.- 1. USA: Shultz, Rahtz, Sirgy, (Phillips?) et al.- 2. Canada: Detlev Zwick, et al., York University; Stan Shapiro, SFU.- 3. Mexico: Luis Raul Rodriques Reyes & David Foust Rodriquez, ITESO - Guadalajara.- 4. Argentina: Jaqueline Pels & Liza Kharoubi Echenique, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella.- 5. Colombia: Andrés Barrios, et al. Universidad de los Andes - Bogotá.- 6. Brazil: João Felipe Sauerbronn, Universidade UNIGRANRIO; Marcus Wilcox Hemais, PUC-Rio de Janeiro, et al.-10. Finland: Pia Polsa, HANKEN; Petteri Repo, University of Helsinki.- 11. Sweden: Ira Haavisto, Nordic Health Group and HANKEN.- 11. Germany: Michaela Haase, Freie Universität Berlin; Michael Ehret, Nottingham Trent University.- 12. Spain: Maria José Montero Simó, Rafael Padilla Araque, Universidad Loyola Andalucía.- 13. Croatia: Dario Miocevic, et al. University of Split.- 14. Vatican: Augusto Zampini Davies, Vatican Dicastery for the Service of Integral Human Development (S.I.H.D.).- 15. UK: Anthony Samuel, Cardiff University 16. Russia: Alexander Krasnikov, et al. Loyola University of Chicago; National Research University, Higher School of Economics.- 17. Turkey: Ahmet Ekici et al., Bilkent University-Ankara.- 18. Algeria: Habib Tilouine, Oran University.- 19. Ghana: Charlene Dadzie, University of South Alabama, Kofi Dadzie, Georgia State University in Accra.- 20. Rwanda: June Francis, Simon Fraser University; et al.- 21. South Africa: Stefan Kruger, Northwest University.- 22. Lebanon: Georges Aoun, Karine Aoun Barakat, et al., St. Joseph University, Beirut.-23. India: Nicholas Santos, et al., Creighton University and XIMB-India.- 24. Indonesia: Tony and Primidya K.M. Soesilo, Bina Nusantara University, Jakarta.- 25. Vietnam: Nguyen Thi Tuyet Mai, et al., National Economics University - Hanoi.- 26. Singapore: TBD May Lwin et al., Nanyang Technological University.- 26. Thailand: Busaya Virakul, et al., National Institute of Development Administration - Bangkok.- 27. China/Taiwan: Duan-Rung Chen, National Taiwan University; Winston Tseng, UC-Berkeley; Julian Chow, UC-Berkeley.- 28. Japan: Yoshiko, et al. Tokyo City University.- 29. Korea: Dong-Jin Lee, Yonsei University.- 30. Australia: Michael Polonsky, Deakin University.- 31. New Zealand: Ben Wooliscroft, Auckland University of Technology, Alexandra Ganglmair-Wooliscroft, Massey University.- Part 3: Epilogue.- 32. Summary and ways forward.
Part 1.- 1. Introduction: background and context.- Part 2: Country experiences and best practices.- 1. USA: Shultz, Rahtz, Sirgy, (Phillips?) et al.- 2. Canada: Detlev Zwick, et al., York University; Stan Shapiro, SFU.- 3. Mexico: Luis Raul Rodriques Reyes & David Foust Rodriquez, ITESO - Guadalajara.- 4. Argentina: Jaqueline Pels & Liza Kharoubi Echenique, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella.- 5. Colombia: Andrés Barrios, et al. Universidad de los Andes - Bogotá.- 6. Brazil: João Felipe Sauerbronn, Universidade UNIGRANRIO; Marcus Wilcox Hemais, PUC-Rio de Janeiro, et al.-10. Finland: Pia Polsa, HANKEN; Petteri Repo, University of Helsinki.- 11. Sweden: Ira Haavisto, Nordic Health Group and HANKEN.- 11. Germany: Michaela Haase, Freie Universität Berlin; Michael Ehret, Nottingham Trent University.- 12. Spain: Maria José Montero Simó, Rafael Padilla Araque, Universidad Loyola Andalucía.- 13. Croatia: Dario Miocevic, et al. University of Split.- 14. Vatican: Augusto Zampini Davies, Vatican Dicastery for the Service of Integral Human Development (S.I.H.D.).- 15. UK: Anthony Samuel, Cardiff University 16. Russia: Alexander Krasnikov, et al. Loyola University of Chicago; National Research University, Higher School of Economics.- 17. Turkey: Ahmet Ekici et al., Bilkent University-Ankara.- 18. Algeria: Habib Tilouine, Oran University.- 19. Ghana: Charlene Dadzie, University of South Alabama, Kofi Dadzie, Georgia State University in Accra.- 20. Rwanda: June Francis, Simon Fraser University; et al.- 21. South Africa: Stefan Kruger, Northwest University.- 22. Lebanon: Georges Aoun, Karine Aoun Barakat, et al., St. Joseph University, Beirut.-23. India: Nicholas Santos, et al., Creighton University and XIMB-India.- 24. Indonesia: Tony and Primidya K.M. Soesilo, Bina Nusantara University, Jakarta.- 25. Vietnam: Nguyen Thi Tuyet Mai, et al., National Economics University - Hanoi.- 26. Singapore: TBD May Lwin et al., Nanyang Technological University.- 26. Thailand: Busaya Virakul, et al., National Institute of Development Administration - Bangkok.- 27. China/Taiwan: Duan-Rung Chen, National Taiwan University; Winston Tseng, UC-Berkeley; Julian Chow, UC-Berkeley.- 28. Japan: Yoshiko, et al. Tokyo City University.- 29. Korea: Dong-Jin Lee, Yonsei University.- 30. Australia: Michael Polonsky, Deakin University.- 31. New Zealand: Ben Wooliscroft, Auckland University of Technology, Alexandra Ganglmair-Wooliscroft, Massey University.- Part 3: Epilogue.- 32. Summary and ways forward.
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