17 results
Search Results
2. Liberal fatalism, COVID 19 and the politics of impossibility.
- Author
-
Bacevic, Jana and McGoey, Linsey
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,FATE & fatalism ,POLITICAL change ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
How liberal governments manage knowledge, ignorance, prediction and uncertainty has attracted increased attention across the social sciences. In this paper, we analyse the strategy and rhetoric of the UK government during the COVID-19 pandemic, with particular attention to the first half of 2020. We see the initial UK policy response – as well as its later legitimation – as a form of 'politics of impossibility', effecting political change through claims of incapacity or impotence. We argue this approach departs from the uses of knowledge and ignorance in both classical liberalism and neoliberalism, and suggests the emergence of a new, hybrid form of governance which can be dubbed liberal fatalism. We discuss the relevance of this new form of governance for political futures of an increasingly volatile world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Politics and pandemics.
- Author
-
Parker, Richard and Ferraz, Dulce
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,PRACTICAL politics ,COVID-19 vaccines ,WORLD health ,PUBLIC health ,TELECOMMUNICATION ,HEALTH systems agencies ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This Special Issue of Global Public Health on Politics & Pandemics brings together 26 articles and commentaries that address diverse aspects of the politics of COVID-19 and related issues. These papers are grouped together in six topical areas: theories and politics of global health, health systems and policies, country responses, social inequalities, social responses, and the politics of science and technology. The goal of the Special Issue is to give readers a sense of the range of topics that have been a focus for research in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic and to provide diverse examples of how research and analysis on the political dimensions of the pandemic can contribute to confronting the COVID-19 crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Medical populism and the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Lasco, Gideon
- Subjects
DECEPTION ,EPIDEMICS ,PRACTICAL politics ,TRUST ,UNCERTAINTY ,WORLD health ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,LEADERS ,SOCIAL media ,FAKE news ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This paper uses the vocabulary of 'medical populism' to identify and analyse the political constructions of (and responses to) the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil, the Philippines, and the United States from January to mid-July 2020, particularly by the countries' heads of state: Jair Bolsonaro, Rodrigo Duterte, and Donald Trump. In all three countries, the leaders' responses to the outbreak can be characterised by the following features: simplifying the pandemic by downplaying its impacts or touting easy solutions or treatments, spectacularizing their responses to crisis, forging divisions between the 'people' and dangerous 'others', and making medical knowledge claims to support the above. Taken together, the case studies illuminate the role of individual political actors in defining public health crises, suggesting that medical populism is not an exceptional, but a familiar response to them. This paper concludes by offering recommendations for global health in anticipating and responding to pandemics and infectious disease outbreaks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Mortality, Identity & Trans-Subjectivity: A Discussion of Shlomit Yadlin-Gadot's "The Carnivalesque Politics of a Pandemic Body".
- Author
-
Slavin, Malcolm Owen
- Subjects
PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MORTALITY ,COVID-19 ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Shlomit's Yadlin-Gadot's paper, "The Carnivalesque Politics of a Pandemic Body," carries us into a bit of a wild, carnival-like experience: a dazzling array of images, disguises, and visual metaphors delivered with a powerful immediacy. I will stay as close as I can to what Yadlin-Gadot has presented, while at the same time trying to translate her brilliant conceptual array of terms about Covid-19, carnival and trans-subjectivity in a way that may help us define them while touching on the big questions she poses in her dual ending: What can relational thought offer in times of Covid-19, and what can Covid-19 offer relational thought in terms of a challenge? Or, where does the carnivalesque take us in terms of theory, and where does theory take us in terms of the carnivalesque? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Carnivalesque Politics of a Pandemic Body.
- Author
-
Yadlin-Gadot, Shlomit
- Subjects
PANDEMICS ,SOCIAL contact ,SOCIAL interaction ,PRACTICAL politics ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Covid-19 has affected our lives in innumerable and formerly unimaginable ways. Among its effects is the threat to our identity in terms of broken bodily boundaries, severed social contacts, and a blurring of our group belongings. A response to this mingled physio-social threat has been an unprecedented surge of trans-subjectivity, as a form of intersubjectivity that is both elevated and reduced. In this paper, this phenomenon is explored in its carnivalesque manifestation, expressing itself as both a revolt against state control and an effort to re-appropriate a sense of bodily self and other. I illustrate these ideas with theoretical, visual and clinical materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Sanitizing agri-food tech: COVID-19 and the politics of expectation.
- Author
-
Reisman, Emily
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,PANDEMICS ,GEOPOLITICS ,PRACTICAL politics ,PRECARITY - Abstract
Several emerging technologies for agri-food systems are promoted by supporters as alleviating the instabilities of COVID-19 and thus increasingly necessary and inevitable. Compelled to pivot towards the pandemic, technologists align their projects with narratives of safety, security and resilience. This paper highlights the political contours of these technologies, arguing that proposed innovations are far from neutral paths toward a more sanitary and secure agri-food future. Most are limited in their capacity to disrupt patterns of racial and geopolitical hierarchy, ecological precarity, and concentrated power in the food system, or to fulfill pandemic relief promises in their current form. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Primary care perspectives on pandemic politics.
- Author
-
Goodyear-Smith, Felicity, Kinder, Karen, Eden, Aimee R., Strydom, Stefan, Bazemore, Andrew, Phillips, Robert, Taylor, Melina, George, Joe, and Mannie, Cristina
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,STATISTICS ,COVID-19 ,PRACTICAL politics ,RESEARCH methodology ,PUBLIC health ,HYGIENE ,QUANTITATIVE research ,PRIMARY health care ,EMERGENCY management ,SEVERITY of illness index ,SURVEYS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,QUALITATIVE research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTER-observer reliability ,DECISION making ,STAY-at-home orders ,COVID-19 testing ,SOCIAL distancing ,CONTACT tracing ,STATISTICAL correlation ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
While the COVID-19 pandemic now affects the entire world, countries have had diverse responses. Some responded faster than others, with considerable variations in strategy. After securing border control, primary health care approaches (public health and primary care) attempt to mitigate spread through public education to reduce person-to-person contact (hygiene and physical distancing measures, lockdown procedures), triaging of cases by severity, COVID-19 testing, and contact-tracing. An international survey of primary care experts' perspectives about their country's national responseswas conducted April to early May 2020. This mixed method paper reports on whether they perceived that their country's decision-making and pandemic response was primarily driven by medical facts, economic models, or political ideals; initially intended to develop herd immunity or flatten the curve, and the level of decision-making authority (federal, state, regional). Correlations with country-level death rates and implications of political forces and processes in shaping a country's pandemic response are presented and discussed, informed by our data and by the literature. The intersection of political decision-making, public health/primary care policies and economic strategies is analysed to explore implications of COVID-19's impact on countries with different levels of social and economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Pandemic in the Time of Trump: Digital Media Logic and Deadly Politics.
- Author
-
Altheide, David L.
- Subjects
COMPUTER logic ,DIGITAL media ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PANDEMICS ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
This paper examines the power of a mediatized President to use reflexive propaganda—the rules and assumptions of digital media—to define a public health crisis. During the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, President Trump engaged in attention‐based politics, or the use of media to draw attention of the largest audience to himself, at the expense of an efficient response to a major public health crisis. The repetitive tweets, with a common form—vulgar and combative language, usually against journalists—converted Donald Trump into a digital meme and enabled the President to dwell on his distorted accomplishments and TV ratings, to downplay health risks, and initially define the lethal virus as a benign hoax. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Politics, policy, and pandemic control: a global perspective.
- Author
-
Stowell, Nicholas, Immormino, Joseph, Ortiz Salazar, Ana, Zeng, Yuzhu, and Arbetman-Rabinowitz, Marina
- Subjects
NATURAL disasters ,PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COUNTRIES ,COVID-19 ,DEATH rate ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Foreign Policy Journal (CFPJ) is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The strength of a weak centre: pandemic politics in the European Union and the United States.
- Author
-
Alexander-Shaw, Kate, Ganderson, Joseph, and Schelkle, Waltraud
- Subjects
INTEGRITY ,PANDEMICS ,POLITICAL systems ,PRACTICAL politics ,FEDERAL government ,PREPAREDNESS ,SELF-efficacy ,WISDOM - Abstract
The European Union presents a puzzle to political systems scholars: how can a developing polity, with all its attendant functional weaknesses, be rendered politically stable even through moments of a policy crisis? Building on insights from the literature on fiscal federalism, this article challenges much conventional wisdom on Europe's incompleteness. This is based on the corollary of Jonathan Rodden's concept of Hamilton's Paradox: whereas a strong centre cannot resist exploitation by states because it has the means to rescue them, a weak centre's lack of exploitable capacity may induce states to support, and even empower, it in a crisis. This article argues that in providing a contemporaneous stress-test, Covid-19 serves to expose both the pathologies of a strong-centred federation and the surprising resilience of a weak one. It highlights three polity features—powers, decision-making modes and integrity—and charts their political implications during an acute crisis. The article argues that in the EU these features incentivise cooperative 'polity maintenance' between polarised states, a feature absent in an American polity marked by rivalry between polarised parties. The article thus challenges notions that the EU's incompleteness necessarily leads it to dysfunction or that it should strive to emulate established federations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Online coverage of the COVID-19 outbreak in Anglo-American democracies: internet news coverage and pandemic politics in the USA, Canada, and New Zealand.
- Author
-
Sommer, Udi and Rappel-Kroyzer, Or
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PANDEMICS ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,INTERNET ,DEMOCRACY ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
We examine how internet media outlets in key Anglo-American democracies differed under a similar external shock: the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. COVID-19 posed a special challenge to democracy, juxtaposing it with alternative forms of government, which may be better positioned to deal with such a crisis. The online media, as the watchdog of democracy, played a key role. As the pandemic started to spread worldwide, three democracies – the USA, Canada, and New Zealand – were of particular interest. The USA had the highest number of cases and deaths, considerably more than its neighbor to the north. NZ was the democracy that most effectively dealt with the pandemic. We comprehensively study the coverage of the outbreak on the internet website of a newspaper of record in each. Data were harvested for the universe of 27,089 articles published online between mid-February and early May on the websites of the New York Times, New Zealand Herald, and the Globe and Mail. Natural learning processing and dependency parsing are the methods used to analyze the data. We find meaningful differences between the outlets in timing, structure, and content. Compared with their US counterpart, the online watchdogs of democracy in Canada and NZ – where COVID-19 politics were far more effective – barked louder, clearer and 2 weeks earlier. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Pandemic Politics in the United States: COVID‐19 as a New Type of Political Emergency.
- Author
-
Sommer, Udi and Rappel‐Kroyzer, Or
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 ,POLITICAL party leadership ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Does a state of emergency necessarily contract human behavior? In times of security crises, for instance, citizens overcome their divides. Our analysis explores the relationship between county‐level partisanship in the United States during COVID‐19 and mobility. We provide an original theoretical analysis to distinguish pandemic politics from politics in times of emergency as we had known them. Our framework helps reconcile previous contradictory findings about this type of emergency politics. Such a frame is needed as it has been a century since the last major global pandemic and COVID‐19 may not be the last. There are five reasons to distinguish COVID‐19 from previously familiar types of emergency politics: psychological, national sentiments, policy related, elite related, and time related. Our extensive mobility big data (462,115 county*days from March–August 2020) are uniquely informative about pandemic politics. In times of pandemic, people literally vote with their feet on government actions. The data are highly representative of the U.S. population. At the pandemic outbreak, our exploratory innovative analysis suggests political divides are exacerbated. Later, with mixed messages about the plague from party leadership, such exceedingly partisan patterns dissipate. They make way to less politically infused and more educationally, demographically, and economically driven behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Social Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic. A Systematic Review.
- Author
-
Hosseinzadeh, Pouya, Zareipour, Mordali, Baljani, Esfandyar, and Moradali, Monireh Rezaee
- Subjects
PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,SOCIAL problems ,ONLINE information services ,LIFESTYLES ,HEALTH education ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PRACTICAL politics ,HUMAN sexuality ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HEALTH literacy ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,MEDLINE ,PSYCHOLOGY of the sick ,SOCIAL distancing ,FAMILY relations ,COVID-19 pandemic ,TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
Copyright of Investigacion & Educacion en Enfermeria is the property of Universidad de Antioquia, Facultad de Enfermeria and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Pandemic politics: policy evaluations of government responses to COVID-19.
- Author
-
Altiparmakis, Argyrios, Bojar, Abel, Brouard, Sylvain, Foucault, Martial, Kriesi, Hanspeter, and Nadeau, Richard
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PANDEMICS ,PARTISANSHIP ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
The COVID-19 crisis has demanded that governments take restrictive measures that are abnormal for most representative democracies. This article aims to examine the determinants of the public's evaluations towards those measures. This article focuses on political trust and partisanship as potential explanatory factors of evaluations of each government's health and economic measures to address the COVID-19 crisis. To study these relationships between trust, partisanship and evaluation of measures, data from a novel comparative panel survey is utilised, comprising eleven democracies and three waves, conducted in spring 2020. This article provides evidence that differences in evaluations of the public health and economic measures between countries also depend on contextual factors, such as polarisation and the timing of the measures' introduction by each government. Results show that the public's approval of the measures depends strongly on their trust in the national leaders, an effect augmented for voters of the opposition. Supplemental data for this article can be accessed online at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01402382.2021.1930754. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The geography of the US's mishandling of COVID‐19: A commentary on the politics of science in democracies.
- Author
-
Schrager, Benjamin
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,PRACTICAL politics ,DEMOCRACY ,GEOGRAPHY ,PANDEMICS - Abstract
During the pandemic, many prominent global leaders and scholars have called for placing science above politics. This commentary argues that such rhetoric dangerously oversimplifies science and politics as insular from democracy and geographical context. The theory of co‐construction from science and technology studies reveals the pandemic's geographic intersection with other threats to democracy, such as rising inequality and authoritarianism. Since COVID‐19 figures to be central to the politics of the future, the field of geography helps to contextualise the importance of problematic trends that hinder the capacity for democracies to respond to present and future crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Universal health care and political economy, neoliberalism and effects of COVID‐19: A view of systems and complexity.
- Author
-
Peterson, Chris L. and Walker, Christine
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,CLINICAL governance ,PRACTICAL politics ,PRIMARY health care ,NATIONAL health insurance ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
Sturmberg and Martin's application of systems and complexity theory to understanding Universal Health Care (UHC) and Primary Health Care (PHC) is evaluated in the light of the influence of political economy on health systems. Furthermore, the role that neoliberal approaches to governance have had in creating increased inequities is seen as a key challenge for UHC. COVID‐19 has emphasized long standing discrepancies in health and these disadvantages require government will and cooperation together with adequate social services to redress these discrepancies in UHC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.