The Dawn of a New Common.- Covidspiracy: Old Wine in New Barrels?.- Do Not Pass Up the Opportunity!.- Internet Access as an Essential Social Good.- In-Work Poverty in Times of COVID-19.- Being a Collective Jeremiah.- COVID-19 and the Secular Theodicy.- Online Proctoring Put to the Test.- Experiences of People With an Intellectual Disability, Their Relatives and Support Staff With COVID-19: The Value of Vital Supportive Relationships.- Labor Supply and Well-Being During the Early Stages of the COVID-19 Crisis in the Netherlands: Lessons from Microdata.- The Economy, Nature, and the Meaning of Life After the Coronavirus Crisis.- Litigating the Crisis: Towards a Rebalancing of the Rights of Investors versus Public Interest?.- Plus Ça Change ...? How the COVID-19 Crisis May Lead to a Revaluation of the Local.- Perspectives on the Common: The Input of Literature.- Shaping the Post-COVID 19 Agenda: A Call for Responsible Leadership.- The Sciences During the New Common: A Missed Opportunity?.- Growing Up in Times of COVID-19: When a Window of Opportunity Is Temporarily Closed.- To Solve the Coronavirus Crisis: Click Here.- The Comeback of the Old Theological Narratives During the Coronavirus Crisis: A Critical Reflection.- Rethinking Education in a Crisis: How New Is a New Common Really?.- Involve Residents to Ensure Person-Centered Nursing Home Care During Crises Like the COVID-19 Outbreak.- Crisis Information Management: From Technological Potential to Societal Impact.- Efficient Scientific Self-Correction in Times of Crisis.- Fortified Nudges? Protecting the Vulnerable in a Post-COVID Society.- Can AI Help to Avert the Environmental Great Filter?.- Values and Principles as Cornerstones of a Renewed Normal.- A New Democratic Norm(al)? Political Legitimacy Amidst the COVID-19 Pandemic.- Balancing Public Health and Economic Interests Whilst Creating New Opportunities for Labor Migrants.- Is COVID-19 a Crime? A Criminological Perspective.- There's an App for That: Technological Solutionism as COVID-19 Policy in the Global North.- Fast Forward Science: Risks and Benefits in the Rapid Science of COVID-19.- Afterword by Wim van de Donk.
Emile Aarts is a Professor of Computer Science at Tilburg
University (The Netherlands). After completion of his academic
studies at Radboud University Nijmegen and Groningen University, he
joined Philips Research in 1983 where he worked in various research
and management positions until he was appointed in 2009 as Chief
Scientific Officer. In 2012 he left Philips to resume a full-time
academic career as dean of the faculty of Mathematics and Computing
Science of the Eindhoven University of Technology. From 2015
until 2019 he has been the rector of Tilburg University. Emile
Aarts is an experienced and highly-cited scientist. He is the
co-author of 20 books and more than 250 scientific papers. His most
influential work is on local search, a branch of mathematical
optimization that has a broad application in engineering,
management sciences, and artificial intelligence.
Hein Fleuren is a Professor of Business Analytics and Operations
Research (BA/OR) in Logistics at Tilburg University (The
Netherlands) and is the Co-Founder and Director of the Zero Hunger
Lab where Data Science helps to achieve Sustainable Development
Goal 2 – Zero Hunger by 2030. In 2010, Hein changed his research
focus to humanitarian supply chains because the same business
analytics methods can be used with financial benefits for a company
as well as for humanity as a whole. Together with his Master’s
thesis students, Hein has initiated a research program at the
United Nations – World Food Programme (WFP). This research has
contributed a lot to the efficiency of the food supply chains of
the WFP and the impact is huge. In 2012, Hein was part of the
winning TNT Express team of the prestigious Franz Edelman award in
Los Angeles with Tilburg University. In 2018, Hein, together with
his Ph.D. researcher Koen Peters, won the DCHI Award for
Humanitarian Innovation. He has previously worked for Philips
Electronics, Deutsche Post AG, and TNT Express. Hein Fleuren’s main
specialization is transport & distribution and in particular
express networks.
Margriet Sitskoorn is a Full Professor in Clinical Neuropsychology
at Tilburg University (The Netherlands) and is registered as a
Clinical Neuropsychologist, Specialist BIG registration. She is the
program leader Health & Wellbeing of the Impact program of Tilburg
University. This program connects researchers from various fields
to partners outside academia to gain new insights and solutions for
the complex challenges of the 21st century. She represents Tilburg
University within the VSNU Digital Society program Health &
Wellbeing. Margriet Sitskoorn has published more than 100
international and national articles, books, and book chapters, and
her books have been translated into several languages. Her main
scientific interest is in experience-based neuroplasticity. This
research focuses on the potential to regulate and capitalize on
neuroplasticity in humans through cognitive, behavioral, and
environmental stimulation. She is the author of several
bestsellers: her book Hersenhack (2019) focuses on how the
dissemination of information in the digital world can lead to
personal and global problems.
Ton Wilthagen is a Full Professor in Institutional and Legal
Aspects of the Labor Market at Tilburg University (The
Netherlands). He is the leader of the theme ‘Empowering the
Resilient Society’ of the Social Impact program of Tilburg
University. He is also a member of the Social Sciences Council of
the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, the figurehead
of the ‘Resilient Societies’ program of the Dutch National Science
Agenda, the Tilburg University representative for the Digital
Society program ‘Citizenship and Democracy of the association of
Dutch Universities, and recently was a Fellow at the Netherlands
Institute of Advanced Studies in Amsterdam. Ton Wilthagen has
published and taught extensively on the themes of flexicurity,
transitionallabor markets, inclusive labor markets, life-course
approaches, industrial relations, and regional labor market policy.
He has been involved in many European-scale research projects,
commissioned among other things by the European Commission, the
International Labour Organisation (ILO), the OECD, and the European
Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions.
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