Governmentality Versus Community: The Impact of the COVID Lockdowns.

Claire Wallace, Lucia Mytna-Kurekova, Margarita Leon, Jacqueline O'Reilly, Constantin Blome, Margarita Bussi, Becky Faith, Mark Finney, Janine Leschke, Chiara Ruffa, Emma Russell, Mi AhSchøyen, Matthias Thurer, Marge Unt, Rachel Verdin
Author Information
  1. Claire Wallace: University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland. ORCID
  2. Lucia Mytna-Kurekova: Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia.
  3. Margarita Leon: Universitat Autonoma Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain.
  4. Jacqueline O'Reilly: University of Sussex Business School, Falmer, England.
  5. Constantin Blome: University of Sussex Business School and Louvain School of Management, Falmer, England.
  6. Margarita Bussi: University of Louvain, Louvain, Belgium.
  7. Becky Faith: University of Sussex Business School, University of Louvain, Louvain, Belgium.
  8. Mark Finney: Emory and Henley College, Emory, USA.
  9. Janine Leschke: Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
  10. Chiara Ruffa: Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
  11. Emma Russell: University of Sussex, Falmer, England.
  12. Mi AhSchøyen: Norwegian Social Research, Oslo Metropolitan University, Oslo, Norway.
  13. Matthias Thurer: Jinan University, Guangzhou, China.
  14. Marge Unt: Tallinn University, Tallinn, Estonia.
  15. Rachel Verdin: University of Sussex Business School, Falmer, England.

Abstract

The COVID lockdowns were characterised by new forms of governmentality as lives were disrupted and controlled through the vertical transmission of biopolitics by the state. The paper considers how this was experienced by academics in 11 different countries through analysis of diaries written during the first lockdown. The paper asks if communities can offer an alternative to governmentality by looking at three levels: the national, the neighbourhood and the personal. Whilst at a national level the idea of community was instrumentalised to encourage compliance to extraordinary measures, at the local level community compassion through helping neighbours encouraged horizontal connections that could offer a "space" within the dominant logic of governmentality. At the level of personal communities, the digitalisation of social relationships helped to create supportive networks over widely dispersed areas but these were narrowly rather than widely focused, avoiding critical discussion.

Keywords

References

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