Description
"Women Rule" brings you a special episode of POLITICO's new podcast
series "Global Translations."
From closed factories to closed borders, the Covid-19 pandemic exposed
the fragility of our systems, creating a period of scarcity where demand
skyrocketed — from freezers to PPE — and we couldn't supply items fast
enough. In this episode of "Global Translations", POLITICO hosts Luiza
Savage and Ryan Heath take a deep dive with experts into global supply
chains and what "decoupling" and "reshoring" are all about when it comes
to America’s reliance on China and the rest of the world.
Luiza Savage is the host of "Global Translations".
Ryan Heath is a host of "Global Translations".
Annie Rees is a producer for POLITICO Audio.
Kara Tabor is a producer for POLITICO Audio.
Jenny Ament is the senior producer for POLITICO Audio.
Irene Noguchi is the executive producer of POLITICO Audio.
Adegoke Oke is a professor of supply chain management at Arizona State
University.
Tom Duesterberg is a senior fellow at Hudson Institute. He is an expert
on trade and foreign policy.
David Wertime is POLITICO's editorial director for China and author of
the China Watcher newsletter.
Check out and subscribe to POLITICO's Global Translations and China
Watcher newsletters, and Luiza Savage's in-depth piece on how the
pandemic is forging a new consensus on globalization.
Global Translations:
https://www.politico.com/newsletters/global-translations China Watcher:
https://www.politico.com/newsletters/politico-china-watcher Supply chain
tug-of-war article:
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/21/pandemic-forging-new-consensus-globalization-430605
For our final episode of 2020, Anna is joined by Alicia Garza, the activist and co-founder of the Black Lives Matter movement. They look back at 2020 — a year when Americans endured crises from the pandemic to the economic recession, racial injustices and a highly contentious presidential...
Published 12/16/20
Anna is joined by POLITICO's Carrie Budoff Brown and Elizabeth Ralph to talk about the strange year we’ve all lived through — from the presidential election to the global pandemic — and look forward to 2021 and beyond, and what all of it means for women.
Published 12/02/20