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ACS Arizona: The Last Impeachment of Trump

ACS Arizona: The Last Impeachment of Trump Please join the ACS Arizona Lawyer Chapter, the Constitutional Accountability Center, and the University of Arizona Law and Arizona State Law ACS Student Chapters for a panel discussion on lessons learned from and the constitutional implications of the impeachments of Donald Trump on Tuesday, February 23, 2021, from 5:30 to 6:45 pm MT. Introductions by: Featuring: Frank Bowman, Floyd R. Gibson Missouri Endowed Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law; Author, High Crimes and Misdemeanors: A History of Impeachment for the Age of Trump; Member, ACS Central Missouri Board of Directors Asha Rangappa, Director or Admissions and Senior Lecturer, Yale University Jackson Institute for Global Affairs; Legal and National Security Analyst, CNN

World Briefing: Foreign correspondents and experts discuss world news

China Daily: China, US advised to refresh ties

Share this article Share this article BEIJING, Jan. 28, 2021 /PRNewswire/  Officials and experts have urged China and the United States to reshape their damaged relationship and called on the new US administration to employ positive policies to refresh ties with Beijing to benefit both nations and the world. Addressing the virtual Vision China event organized by China Daily on Thursday, Vice-Foreign Minister Le Yucheng expressed hope that the new year will bring a new start to China-US relations. Le Yucheng, China s Vice-minister of Foreign Affairs. Photo by Feng Yongbin/China Daily Le said he was impressed by US President Joe Biden s repeated appeal to people in the US for unity over division in his inauguration address. I believe we need exactly the same spirit for China-US relations, he added.

White-hot race on vaccine distribution breeds vaccinationalism

WORLD / CROSS-BORDERS By Hu Yuwei and Leng Shumei Published: Jan 28, 2021 01:37 AM Sinopharm s COVID-19 vaccine. Photo: VCG Given concerns that wealthy states are fueling a gap in COVID-19 vaccine access around the world, rich states, which are jostling for early jabs, are urged to share, not hoard, at the virtual Davos Agenda 2021 summit of global leaders on Tuesday.  Leaders of many countries, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, urged against a vaccine race between richer countries. Brussels and London tossed threats and accusations against each other over vaccine scarcity after AstraZeneca reduced its promised supply due to production limits.  Tensions raised over delayed deliveries and broken promises raised memories of the race for life-saving masks in early 2020.

Looting life-saving vaccines widens gaps and breeds vaccinationalism experts warn

CHINA / SOCIETY Rich states accused of ‘modern piracy’ after looting life-saving vaccines By Hu Yuwei and Leng Shumei Published: Jan 28, 2021 10:52 PM Photo taken on May 18, 2020 shows a logo in front of AstraZeneca s building in Luton, Britain. AstraZeneca, which is developing a possible vaccine against COVID-19 in partnership with the University of Oxford, on Wednesday put on hold the phase-3 trial of its vaccine following an unexplained illness in one trial participant in Britain. (Photo by Tim Ireland/Xinhua)   Rich countries have been accused of “modern piracy” after reportedly using diverse tactics to source life-saving COVID-19 vaccines. Recent quarrels over scarce vaccines bring back memories of the wrestle for life-saving masks in the early stage of the outbreaks last year. Practices such as outbidding other countries to secure timely purchases in the increasingly intense global market seemingly remind us of how great powers hoarded supplies and looted res

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