Why countries with 'loose', rule-breaking cultures have been hit harder by Covid | ||||
المجلة المصرية للعلوم الاجتماعية والسلوکية | ||||
Article 1, Volume 3, Issue 3, April 2021, Page 13-16 | ||||
Document Type: مقالات نظرية وميدانية "کمية و کيفية " | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/ejsbs.2021.182538 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Author | ||||
Michele Gelfand Gelfand* | ||||
Professor of Psychology, University of Maryland, USA | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Our research shows how 'tighter' societies do better – and how the rest must learn to adapt to defeat the pandemic. With a death toll of over 2 million and nearly 100 million people infected worldwide, Covid-19 is still wreaking havoc even as vaccines are rolled out. Yet fatalities are far from evenly distributed. Some nations have effectively beaten the pandemic; others have been soundly defeated. Japan's 126 million citizens have recorded just over 5,000 deaths. With a nearly identical population, Mexico has suffered more than 150,000 casualties and counting. | ||||
References | ||||
[1] This was previously published in The Guardian journal on Mon 1 Feb 2021. Both the author and the publisher have permitted the Journal’s editor to publish the article as a research note. | ||||
Statistics Article View: 197 |
||||