Published on 23 February 2021 Devanjan Bhattacharya Anne Funnemark
More than a year after the first confirmed case of Covid-19, and almost eleven months after the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared a pandemic, there are few areas of local, regional and global politics, policy and society that have not been impacted by the global health crisis. Peace processes and conflict-affected areas across the world are no exception. Researchers at the Political Settlements Research Programme (PSRP) at the University of Edinburgh and partners in the Covid Collective research platform, have been tracking the nexus between conflict, peace, and Covid-19 since the beginning of the pandemic. To help inform peace and conflict research at a time of rapid and often unparalleled change, PSRP has developed the Covid-19 Library of Trackers, a curated selection of trackers that trace developments during Covid-19 in a wide variety