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Page 8 - Sándor Lénárd News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Sándor Lénárd: A szubszidiaritás a sikeres Európa kötőanyaga

A nyár egyik jó híre, hogy a szubszidiaritás elve a strasbourgi Emberi Jogok Európai Bíróság működésének alapjául szolgáló egyezmény részévé vált. Európa ereje a gondolkodás, a hagyományok és a kultúrák változatosságban rejlik. A szubszidiaritás elve pedig védelmet jelenthet azokkal a központosítási törekvésekkel szemben, amelyek e sokszínűség felszámolásán dolgoznak.

Europe needs to maintain a good working relationship with the China and the United States - conversation with Peter A G van Bergeijk

Globalization and deglobalization come in alternating waves phases of strong globalization carry the seeds of their destruction, that is: such phases generate the forces that ultimately set limits and force a retreat of internationalization – Peter A.G. van Bergeijk pointed, professor at the International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University out in a conversation with Lénárd Sándor.

Rethinking Global and Local - conversation with Lorena Mathien

"What we will likely see is a longer-term supply chain shift. We have already started to see the shift of high-labor work from China to other countries such as Vietnam, India, and Mexico. I anticipate companies and countries will continue this trend; it just may not be so evident since it is more of a long-term strategy" – Lorena Mathien, associate professor of the State University of New York at Buffalo pointed out in a conversation with Lénárd Sándor, researcher at the National University of Public Service.

The Waiver of Patent Rights Is Not the Appropriate Tool to Address Vaccine Scarcity – conversation with Ana Santos Rutchman

I do not think that the waiver will help us overcoming the current vaccine shortage. The first problem is that there is not enough infrastructure – manufacturing facilities, equipment, personnel – to expand vaccine production to the levels it should be at to meet pandemic demand. In this context, altering the intellectual property status quo does little – Ana Santos Rutschman, assistant professor at the Saint Louis University School of Law pointed out in a conversation with Lénárd Sándor, researcher at the National University of Public Service. Ana Santos RUTSCHMAN is assistant professor at the Saint Louis University School of Law. She has published and presented widely on topics related to health law, food and drug regulation, intellectual property related to vaccines and other biotechnologies, innovation in the life sciences, and law and technology. She was a part of the COVID-19 Innovation Committee for the 2020 Biden presidential campaign. Her book, Vaccines as Tech

The Interent Is a Dynamic Ecosystem - conversation with William Duffield

Government reliance on private speech controls to secure an orderly transition of power, or even the perception of such reliance, does damage to the state’s legitimacy. If private rather than state power ensures the security of the state, the state may be seen as subordinate to the institutions that protect it – Will Duffield, a policy analyst of CATO Institute pointed out in a conversation with Lénárd Sándor, researcher at the National University of Public Service. Will DUFFIELD is a Policy Analyst in the Cato Institute’s Center for Representative Government, where he studies speech and internet governance. His research focuses on the web of government regulation and private rules that govern Americans’ speech online.

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