The CoronaNet Research Project compiles a database on government responses to the corona virus. Our main focus is to collect as much information as we can about the various fine-grained actions governments are taking to defeat the coronavirus. This includes not only gathering information about which governments are responding to the coronavirus, but who they are targeting the policies toward (e.g. other countries), how they are doing it (e.g. travel restrictions, banning exports of masks) and when they are doing it.
Together with 500 political, social and public health science scholars from all over the world, we present an initial release of a large hand-coded dataset of more than 15,000 separate policy announcements from governments around the world visible since December 31st 2019.
The data yields detailed information on:
The level of government responding to the corona virus crisis (e.g. national, regional/state, local/municipal)
Specific actions taken (e.g. travel bans, investments in the public health sector, etc.)
Geographical areas targeted by these measures
Who or what they are targeting (e.g. foreigners, ventilators)
Compliance mechanisms (e.g. mandatory or voluntary)
Timing of policy responses.
CoronaNet is led by researchers at the Hochschule für Politik, Technical University of Munich, NYU Abu Dhabi, University of Southern California, Nazarbayev University, Universidade Brasilia, and the Fors Marsh Group.