English edit

Proper noun edit

Covid19

  1. Alternative form of COVID-19.
    • 2021, Renata Pepicelli, “The Unfinished Transition. The Post-revolutionary Path of Tunisia and the Test of Covid19. A Historical and Socio-Economic Perspective”, in Francesca Maria Corrao, Riccardo Redaelli, editors, States, Actors and Geopolitical Drivers in the Mediterranean: Perspectives on the New Centrality in a Changing Region, Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN, page 284:
      Faced with this situation, the arrival of the Covid19 pandemic in late winter/early spring 2020 showed the real situation of the country, its fragility and the challenges it faces. Thus, analysis of the impact of Covid19 on Tunisia offers a useful magnifying glass to understand the path of Tunisia from the 2011 revolution to the present.
    • 2022, Marc Owen Jones, Digital Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Deception, Disinformation and Social Media, C. Hurst & Co. (Publishers) Ltd., →ISBN:
      Just as religious leaders have cynically, or perhaps ignorantly, promoted fake Covid19 cures, state-controlled news channels have instrumentalised Covid19 to attack Iran’s enemies.
    • 2022, Sónia Nogueira, “Challenges on Digital Destination Campaigns in Tourism During Covid19 Pandemic Crisis – The Case of Portugal National Tourism Authority”, in Alvaro Rocha, Hojjat Adeli, Gintautas Dzemyda, Fernando Moreira, editors, Information Systems and Technologies: WorldCIST 2022, Volume 2 (Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems; 469), Springer Nature Switzerland AG, →ISBN, page 556:
      The official Portugal National Tourism Authority campaigns about national tourism were analyzed, with special attention to their digital brand communication during the Covid19 pandemic crisis from February 2020 until August 2021. This article aims to understand some of the campaigns taken by the Portugal National Tourism Authority to try to mitigate the economic damage caused by the world pandemic currently experienced, Covid19.