8 results on '"Papandreou, George"'
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2. Securing sustainable funding for viral hepatitis elimination plans.
- Author
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Hatzakis, Angelos, Lazarus, Jeffrey V., Cholongitas, Evangelos, Baptista‐Leite, Ricardo, Boucher, Charles, Busoi, Cristian‐Silviu, Deuffic‐Burban, Sylvie, Chhatwal, Jagpreet, Esmat, Gamal, Hutchinson, Sharon, Malliori, Minerva‐Melpomeni, Maticic, Mojca, Mozalevskis, Antons, Negro, Francesco, Papandreou, George A., Papatheodoridis, George V., Peck‐Radosavljevic, Markus, Razavi, Homie, Reic, Tatjana, and Schatz, Eberhard
- Subjects
VIRAL hepatitis ,CHRONIC hepatitis C ,HEPATITIS B ,HEPATITIS C virus ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The majority of people infected with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) in the European Union (EU) remain undiagnosed and untreated. During recent years, immigration to EU has further increased HCV prevalence. It has been estimated that, out of the 4.2 million adults affected by HCV infection in the 31 EU/ European Economic Area (EEA) countries, as many as 580 000 are migrants. Additionally, HCV is highly prevalent and under addressed in Eastern Europe. In 2013, the introduction of highly effective treatments for HCV with direct‐acting antivirals created an unprecedented opportunity to cure almost all patients, reduce HCV transmission and eliminate the disease. However, in many settings, HCV elimination poses a serious challenge for countries' health spending. On 6 June 2018, the Hepatitis B and C Public Policy Association held the 2nd EU HCV Policy summit. It was emphasized that key stakeholders should work collaboratively since only a few countries in the EU are on track to achieve HCV elimination by 2030. In particular, more effort is needed for universal screening. The micro‐elimination approach in specific populations is less complex and less costly than country‐wide elimination programmes and is an important first step in many settings. Preliminary data suggest that implementation of the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Health Sector Strategy on Viral Hepatitis can be cost saving. However, innovative financing mechanisms are needed to raise funds upfront for scaling up screening, treatment and harm reduction interventions that can lead to HCV elimination by 2030, the stated goal of the WHO. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Politics of Fear.
- Author
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PAPANDREOU, GEORGE
- Subjects
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NOBEL Peace Prize , *POLITICAL violence , *EUROPEAN Sovereign Debt Crisis, 2009-2018 , *NATIONALISM , *AWARDS - Abstract
The future of the European Union has never been more in doubt than at the very moment it has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its historical accomplishments. When the heads of Europe's weakest institutions-the Commission, the Council and the Parliament-collected the prize in Oslo on December 10, 2012 they spotlighted the nub of the problem. Unless these institutions can garner the legitimacy of European citizens and transform into a real federal union with common fiscal and economic policies to complement the single currency, Europe will remain at the mercy of global financial markets and the fiscally authoritarian dictates of its strongest state, Germany. Moving beyond this state of affairs was the focus of a recent 'town hall' gathering in Berlin sponsored by the Berggruen Institute on Governance. The meeting brought together current power brokers-such as the contending voices of German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble and French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici, who rarely appear in public together-as well as Europe's top former leaders, key thinkers and young people who will govern in the future. The peace-building project of the European Union was born out of the ashes of World War II and the anguish of the Cold War. Yet, as George Soros points out, its current inability to resolve the eurocrisis by forging greater union is dividing Europe once again, this time between creditors and debtors. Former Greek premier George Papandreou has warned that this division is fomenting a new politics of fear that is giving rise to the same kind of xenophobic movements that fueled the extreme politics of the Nazi era. To avoid a repeat of the last calamitous century, Europe first of all needs a growth strategy both to escape the 'debt trap' it is in-and which austerity alone will only deepen-and to create breathing space for the tough structural reforms that can make Europe as a whole competitive again in a globalized world. To sustain reform, it needs a clear path to legitimacy for the institutions that must govern a federal Europe. The proof that Europe can escape its crisis through a combination of growth, fiscal discipline and structural reform comes from the one country so many want to keep out of the union: Turkey. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan rightfully boasts of Turkey's accomplishments that resulted from the difficult changes carried out after its crisis in 2001-ranging from quickly cleaning up the banks to liberalizing markets to trimming social benefits to make them more affordable in the long run. As a result, Turkey today is the fastest growing economy in the world alongside China with diminished deficit and debt levels that meet the eurozone criteria that many members states themselves cannot today meet. Turkey has even offered a 5 billion euro credit through the IMF for financial aid to Europe. Germany itself also provides some lessons for the rest of Europe. The obvious reason Germany rules today is because it is the most globally competitive country in the European Union. That is the result of a series of reforms that were implemented starting in 2003 under the leadership of then-chancellor Gerhard Schröder. Aimed a bolstering Germany's industrial base and its collateral small and medium enterprises which are the foundation of its middle class society, those reforms introduced more labor flexibility and trimmed benefits to make them sustainably affordable while investing in training, maintaining skills and research and development. Even if Europe's individual nation states can shrink imbalances by following Turkey and Germany in getting their act together, the only ultimate way to save the euro, and thus Europe itself, is to build the complementary governing institutions at the European level. For those institutions to become effective, they must be empowered and legitimated by European citizens themselves. To this end, Tony Blair has suggested a bold move: the direct election of a European president. Symbolically, the Oslo ceremonies were a historical turning point for Europe. By recognizing the European Union's peace-making past, the Nobel Prize challenged Europe to escape once and for all the destructive pull of narrow national interests and passions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Greek Views on the EU Common Foreign and Security Policy.
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Papandreou, George A.
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL relations , *MILITARY policy - Abstract
Focuses on the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) of the European Union. Progress in CFSP; Developments in European Union Defense Policy; Involvement of the EU in a process of institutional reform.
- Published
- 2002
5. Debalkanize the Balkans.
- Author
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Papandreou, George
- Subjects
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MEMBERSHIP , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Discusses the intention of the Balkan region to integrate into the European Union (EU). Benefits of the Balkan Stability Pact to the region; Need to develop measures to cultivate cooperation between Greece and Turkey; Possible impact of the accession of Cyprus to the EU.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Europe's Strategy to Curb Weapons of Mass Distruction.
- Author
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Papandreou, George A. and Lindh, Anna
- Subjects
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WEAPONS of mass destruction , *INTERNATIONAL security , *NUCLEAR nonproliferation , *TREATIES , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL obligations - Abstract
Focuses on the strategies of the European Union to avoid worst-case scenarios involving weapons of mass destruction that threatens international security. Discussion on the increasing number of countries that possess weapons of mass destruction and are in breach of their commitments under international non-proliferation agreements; Need for effective instruments of inspection and verification; Importance of strengthening the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. SAVE GREECE, SAVE EUROPE.
- Author
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PAPANDREOU, GEORGE
- Subjects
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EUROPEAN Sovereign Debt Crisis, 2009-2018 , *EUROPEAN integration , *ENERGY development , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,ECONOMIC conditions in Greece, 1978- - Abstract
The article looks at U.S. policy on the European sovereign debt crisis, European integration, and Greece, as of January 2013. The author, a former Greek prime minister, urges U.S. President Barack Obama to address U.S. attention and resources toward the crisis. He offers proposals including U.S. pressure on Germany to support the Greek economy and U.S. leadership and investment in a large-scale Europe-Middle East energy development project.
- Published
- 2013
8. Join the Club.
- Author
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Papandreou, George A.
- Subjects
- EUROPEAN Union
- Abstract
Reports the expansion of the European Union with the addition of 10 candidate countries.
- Published
- 2002
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