Affiliation:
1. Kings College London, UK/Sciences-Po Paris, France
2. Queen Mary University of London, UK
3. University of Portsmouth, UK
Abstract
This article transects and articulates different disciplines and lines of thought in order to understand the redefinitions of the boundaries of political power in times of COVID-19, and the practices which may outlive the potential normalisation of the crisis when an efficient vaccine
is discovered. We claim that the COVID-19 pandemic is an original form of governmentality by unease articulating three dimensions. First, the basic reaction of modern states when faced with uncertainty is to apply national-territorial logics of controls. Second, bureaucracies consider the
virus as a danger to security and organise public health emergencies according to the rules of the game of national security, creating tensions between internal security, public health and the economy because policymakers may be unsure about the priorities and may prioritise border controls.
Third, resistance against the chosen national policies show that people are not led by a politics of fear and/or protection, but rather their own concerns about themselves with peer-to-peer surveillance as a key element of their compliance. Contact tracing technologies and strategies of border
controls are key elements to analyse. We do so in different contexts: the UK, the EU and Turkey.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
29 articles.
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