Social Sciences, asked by navkirat28, 8 months ago

pls solve it this is my sst assignment. answer in simple words and long answer.question is suggest your reviews on how covid 19 can be stopped from spreading and what are u looking forward to do when life returns to normal. ​

Answers

Answered by asanda08zondi
0

Answer:

I think you can stop Covid- 19 from spreading to stay away from infected people and remember to wear a mask and to wash your hands .

Explanation:

We would like for them to find a vaccine faster

Answered by raveendra445516
0

Answer:

But what happens when a major disruption like the COVID-19 pandemic hits the global economy in a massively accelerated timeframe? Suddenly we are through the looking glass: the horizons are turned around, and a world envisioned only by futurists is playing out in real-time on data terminals, social network feeds, and television screens.

Almost overnight, horizon three has now become horizon one, as fashion houses scramble to convert production lines to make surgical masks, automotive companies to produce ventilators, and brewers and perfume house to make hand sanitizer. Now the final horizon represents the world that used to be the first one: the one where people can leave their houses to go to cafes and movie theatres, go shopping and purchase non-essential goods, and travel domestically and internationally more or less freely.

And yet in this new world, we can still use a version of the three horizons framework, one shaped by the nature of the pandemic and our responses to it. In this scenario, the first horizon is the one where much of the world is now or is likely to be soon. This is an emerging crisis horizon, where society is scrambling to respond to the radically changed situation and taking drastic measures to “flatten the curve” of the pandemic.

Most likely this will be followed by a second horizon that does not represent full recovery but is not the full crisis anymore. In this horizon, the most stringent restrictions are raised but others are kept in place, and supply chains and travel plans are subject to disruption by emerging restrictions on the back of secondary outbreaks. This is the horizon where the public health crisis is followed by its economic impact and shaped in part by governments’ response.

And then there is the new third horizon – the “after” – when the reaction to the COVID-19 health crisis has been assimilated into a new normal or ceded the stage to new disruptions. On one hand this “new normal” won’t be just a return to the “before,” as the pandemic response is accelerating several transformative processes that might be hard to reverse – from the expansion of governments’ role in the economy to the adoption of remote working protocols. But it is also unlikely to be a completely different world from the pre-pandemic: we have learned from the financial and technological disruptions of the past 30 years that there are parts of the fabric of society – from long lived infrastructure to complex regulatory frameworks – that are difficult to change quickly.

Some of the lessons from the original three horizons framework will likely hold true for this new one. The first is that the urgency of the immediate needs of horizon one initiatives always risk taking resources and attention from horizon two and three. If that is true in normal times, it is particularly true in a crisis.

The second is that without strategic discipline, many organizations might be rearranging initiatives into an unbalanced portfolio. In this context, overinvesting in horizon one and three at the expense of horizon two might be particularly dangerous, as horizon two might turn out to be the most critical juncture for many organizations to regain their footing after the wave of disruption.

But these lessons need to be adapted to a situation of disruption and uncertainty. As horizon one in a crisis is much more tumultuous and fast-moving than in “normal” times, it requires much more attention from top leadership attention. Similarly, clear foresight on horizon three becomes more complex in times of disruption, pulled between the possibility of reverting to the past and opening the space for further major disruptions. But what might be particularly challenging in this time is to effectively build and support an effective portfolio of initiatives for the second horizon, which might both mature faster than in “normal” times, and be harder to predict due to the rapidly changing regulator environment.

Taking a three horizons framework can help not just business but also governments, social enterprises, and even families and individuals, in assessing their priorities and allocating energy and resources, so that they are not overwhelmed by tunnel vision during the crisis and throughout the recovery.

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