Generated by GPT-5-mini| Bibliography of the COVID-19 pandemic | |
|---|---|
| Title | Bibliography of the COVID-19 pandemic |
| Subject | COVID-19 pandemic |
| Date | 2019–present |
| Country | International |
Bibliography of the COVID-19 pandemic presents a curated survey of literature, reports, and primary sources pertaining to the global outbreak of SARS‑CoV‑2 beginning in 2019. It synthesizes academic monographs, journal articles, government reports, news coverage, and data repositories to support research on public health, policy response, economic impact, and social consequences. Compilations herein connect works related to major institutions and figures involved in pandemic response and analysis.
The bibliography covers peer‑reviewed journals such as The Lancet, Nature, Science, The New England Journal of Medicine, and BMJ alongside reports from World Health Organization, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Johns Hopkins University, and Imperial College London. It includes books published by Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Harvard University Press, and Penguin Books; policy analyses from Brookings Institution, Council on Foreign Relations, Chatham House, and RAND Corporation; and legal assessments tied to International Health Regulations (2005), World Trade Organization, United Nations, and International Criminal Court. Primary-source journalism from The New York Times, The Guardian, BBC News, Reuters, and Associated Press is indexed alongside multimedia produced by Al Jazeera, CNN, and NHK.
Thematic groupings map to public health and clinical science (vaccinology, therapeutics, epidemiology) documented in works by Anthony Fauci, Katalin Karikó, Sarah Gilbert, Peter Piot, and Paul Farmer; economic impact studied by Kristalina Georgieva, Jerome Powell, Janet Yellen, and Christine Lagarde; and social dimensions explored by Saskia Sassen, Yuval Noah Harari, Thomas Piketty, and Gillian Tett. Legal and ethical literature references Margaret Chan, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Alex Azar, and Andrej Babiš where relevant. Works on supply chains and manufacturing cite Jack Ma, Elon Musk, Biontech, Moderna, and Pfizer; education and remote learning include reports from UNESCO, OECD, and Harvard University.
Chronologies segregate literature into the initial outbreak phase in Wuhan, studies of the first global wave with modeling from Neil Ferguson at Imperial College London, the vaccine development phase featuring Operation Warp Speed and trials by BioNTech SE, and the variant emergence period with sequencing efforts at GISAID, Wellcome Sanger Institute, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Subsequent civil‑society and recovery literature addresses policymaking in European Union, United States, People's Republic of China, India, and Brazil and legal inquiries into national responses such as those involving Brazilian Senate and UK Parliament.
Country bibliographies compile national studies and official reports from entities like NHS England, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (India), China CDC, Brazilian Ministry of Health, South African National Department of Health, and Australian Department of Health. Regional analyses focus on European Commission, African Union, Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Gulf Cooperation Council, and Organization of American States publications. City‑level case studies include documentation on New York City, London, São Paulo, Mumbai, Beijing, and Tokyo.
Academic literature enumerates articles from Cell, Journal of the American Medical Association, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and edited volumes by MIT Press. News-media entries reference longform reporting by ProPublica, The Washington Post, Financial Times, and documentary coverage by PBS, Channel 4, and NHK World. Governmental and intergovernmental formats include briefs, white papers, and datasets from United Nations Development Programme, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and national agencies such as Food and Drug Administration and Public Health England.
Methodological resources index modeling codebases from Imperial College London, datasets curated by Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center, sequence repositories at GISAID, statistical analyses by Our World in Data, and randomized‑trial registries at ClinicalTrials.gov. Public‑health guidance and protocols drawn from World Health Organization technical guidance, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations, and vaccine safety findings from European Medicines Agency are catalogued. Contact tracing and digital surveillance studies refer to projects by Google, Apple Inc., Microsoft, and research consortia at Karolinska Institutet.
Tools and indexes include bibliometric analyses in Scopus (database), Web of Science, PubMed, and preprint aggregators such as medRxiv and bioRxiv. Institutional repositories at Harvard Dataverse, Zenodo, Figshare, and library catalogues at Library of Congress and British Library are listed for archival access. Professional networks and working groups from World Health Organization Collaborating Centres, Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, and academic consortia at University of Oxford and Yale University provide living bibliographies and curated reading lists.
Category:Bibliographies by topic