Author Identifier

Julie Crews

ORCID : 0000-0001-6067-9535

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Corporate Governance and Sustainability Review

Publisher

Virtus Interpress

School

School of Business and Law

RAS ID

35841

Comments

Lester, M., dela Rama, M., & Crews, J. (2021). COVID-19 governance, legitimacy, and sustainability: Lessons from the Australian experience. Corporate Governance and Sustainability Review, 5(1), 143-153. https://doi.org/10.22495/cgsrv5i1sip5

Abstract

During 2020, Australia managed the global and systemic COVID-19 crisis successfully as measured by health and economic indicators. It marshalled the government’s delivery capacity to control the health crisis and put in place measures to offset the induced economic and social costs. At the same time, the crisis revealed long-standing structural weaknesses in a small, democratic, wealthy, and economically successful country that raised questions about post COVID resilience and sustainability. This paper examines that experience by applying a “co-production” governance model that sees success in “crisis management” as the striking of a balance between government capacity and its legitimacy in the eyes of its people. Lessons are drawn in terms of Australia’s ability to tackle the ongoing transition out of COVID and future crises, by building systemic resilience and sustainability.

DOI

10.22495/cgsrv5i1sip5

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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