Abstract
Societies have shown resistance and reflexes to overcome the difficult times they have encountered throughout history and have often been successful. The "New Deal" policies that emerged in the USA after the Great Depression in 1929 pioneered the socio-economic models of the century. Similarly, after the Second World War, new norms and institutional structures were built. Post-war states have had to implement socio-economic programs to adapt themselves to the new situation. It has been inevitable that globalization has led to intellectual and institutional changes due to its multiplier effect. Despite serious concerns about the globalization process, it can be seen as a rational approach to consider its contribution to the formation of democratic, transparent, auditable, effective, citizen-oriented, etc. institutions. The COVID-19 Pandemic seems to have given communities the opportunity to remind and review at multiple points. The first of these is that the reality of the epidemic is not a surprise to the human beings of the millennium age, on the contrary, there have been similar experiences in the past. The commitments made by globalization in dealing with the consequences of the pandemic have forced states to act together to overcome the same problems. Global policies and their consequences have started to be discussed more strongly with the pandemic. However, the pandemic alone is not the element that opens globalization to discussion. The main motivation of our work; societies' showing globalization as a common response to their criticism of the problems arising with the pandemic. In this context, our article tries to analyze the globalization debates that have become more visible with the pandemic and the future of the global world in the main context of economic and democratic processes.