วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 7 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2564

Article Review (1) by Panwa Nilprapunt

Article Review (1)


M. Jae Moon, ‘Fighting COVID-19 with Agility, Transparency, and Participation: Wicked Policy Problems and New Governance Challenges’, (2020) 80(4) Public Administration Review 651—656.

             When the 2019 Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) was first identified in December 2019 among a number of patients reported in China’s city of Wuhan, only a handful of researchers and policymakers managed to realise the virus’ implications and its potential effects on human society. Originally a zoonotic disease transmitted by contracts between wild animals and infected humans in Wuhan’s ‘wet markets’, the virus soon became capable of human-to-human transmission and eventually managed to spread across the globe, resulting in hundred thousand of casualties and the public health emergency of unprecedented scale. This development in return prompted the World Health Organisation (WHO) to declare COVID-19 a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) on 30 January 2020, along with its subsequent decision to designate the virus a ‘pandemic’ status in March 2020: making it the second pandemic of the 21st century following the outbreak of the AH1N1 Influenza during the period between January 2009 to August 2010[1]. With its infectiveness and severity dramatically exacerbated by the ease of individual’s mobility and local governments’ inability to address the amounting burden on the exhausted public health system, COVID-19 has revealed through its ascendance underlying weaknesses of globalisation and the immediate need for reformations of the public sector, in order to enhance its capacity and flexibility necessary in the management of systemic shock events exemplified by the pandemic in question.

             Through the analysis of responses undertaken by the South Korean government following the sudden surge of reported COVID-19 cases in February 2020, Fighting COVID-19 with Agility, Transparency and Participation: Wicked Policy Problems and New Governance Challenges (‘Fighting COVID-19’) offers an insightful account supporting the integration of information transparency and cooperation between public and private sectors as staple elements within the modern public health governance. Comparing between the South Korean government’s handling of COVID-19 and its initial responses to the outbreak of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) in 2015, the article presents its finding that the government’s decision to suppress information during the early phase of the MERS epidemic contributed to the escalation of the issue; whereas its campaigns to raise public awareness and invite active participation were internationally lauded for their effects of dramatically reducing the infection rate of COVID-19[2]. In addition to the significance of information transparency as a means to mitigate impacts of public health emergencies on the general populace, Moon’s evaluation of the different tactics employed between governments in response to COVID-19 also reveals the need of an effective public sector to shift its focus from the traditional reliance on one-sided policies - including the passive approach such as the use of herd immunity; and the active approach including lockdowns and the closure of businesses - towards more flexible measures which make uses of both aspects of policies in the management of epidemics[3]. Coining the term ‘agile-adaptive’ approach in describing the use of Active testing by the South Korean government to locate and isolate potential clusters of infection as a case study, Moon also puts forward the notion that the resulting increase in the government’s mobility would improve its efficiency and transparency: qualities which are instrumental in maintaining the public’s trust in government[4].

             Still, while Moon’s assessment in Fighting COVID-19 may at first accurately reflect the circumstances concerning the pandemic, the persisting presence of COVID-19 in South Korea and his acknowledgement of potential limits to the effectiveness of his propositions raise questions concerning the applicability of flexible and transparent policies as methods of engagement with COVID-19 and future public health crises. The unpredictable behaviour and degree of cooperation from the civil society, in particular, are among main concerns projected by the literature as factors that can jeopardise the management of outbreaks and force interventions from the government in an attempt to restore order - with examples including rationing campaigns adopted in several countries to counteract illegal stockpiling of commodities like food and toilet tissue[5]. This assumption becomes especially evident considering the situation in South Korea following the publication of this article, with the growing public complacency and indoor interactions stemming from the arrival of winter resulting in the dramatic spike of reported cases - a trend also replicated in other countries like Japan who previously had the infection under control[6]. External circumstances and the people’s mentality, therefore, remain unassailable issues despite efforts to pursue the optimal form of public health governance; yet the research appears to try remedy this empty gap through its suggestion that evidence-based heuristics should assist in managing such uncertainties - a wishful gesture that nonetheless remains lacking in substance. 

             Ultimately, disregarding the open-ended nature of its conclusion, Fighting COVID-19 has otherwise been successful in completing objectives it has established for itself. In this work Moon has excelled himself in laying down clear and concise arguments for the development of public health policy, especially within the context of the Post-COVID-19 world as the emerging ‘new normal’ contexts now require governance to be more flexible and sustainable than ever.

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[1] World Health Organisation, Listing of WHO’s response to COVID-19 (2020) <https://www.who.int/news/item/29-06-2020-covidtimeline>.

[2] M. Jae Moon, ‘Fighting COVID-19 with Agility, Transparency, and Participation: Wicked Policy Problems and New Governance Challenges’, (2020) 80(4) Public Administration Review 652.

[3] Ibid 653.

[4] Ibid 653—4.

[5] Ibid 655.

[6] Jake Sturmer and Yumi Asada, ‘Coronavirus was largely under control in South Korea and Japan. Here’s why COVID-19 cases are now spiraling’, ABC News (online), 17 December 2020 <https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-17/japan-and-south-korea-are-struggling-with-coronavirus/12984136>.

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