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Beyond compliance: Good citizenship during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Nick ClarkeClive Barnett
Published in: Transactions (Institute of British Geographers : 1965) (2022)
In the UK, discussion of good citizenship during the COVID-19 pandemic largely focused on compliance and non-compliance with government rules. In this paper, we offer an alternative point of focus. Pandemic governance proceeded not only through rules/morality, but also through freedom/ethics. Good citizenship, therefore, involved practical reasoning in response to situations. We demonstrate this using diaries and other forms of writing collected by Mass Observation during the first six months of the pandemic. Responses to government rules and guidance varied by situation. Many people found governance through freedom/ethics confusing and burdensome. Faced with ethical dilemmas, they managed risks and responsibilities by deliberating, weighing justifications, and sometimes falling back on rules of thumb or heuristics. Discussion of good citizenship during future emergencies would benefit from a greater focus on situations, dilemmas, and justifications.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • coronavirus disease
  • global health
  • public health
  • big data
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • decision making
  • artificial intelligence