Affiliation:
1. School of Justice Studies Liverpool John Moores University Liverpool UK
2. Social Policy and Criminology, The Open University Milton Keynes UK
Abstract
AbstractThis article critically considers the UK Government's insidious attempts to control the narrative around COVID‐19 deaths through using the interrelated strategies of “talk and ‘silence’ in order to socially construct a definitive ‘truth’” around the virus. The article traces how these strategies worked in practice and the shift which took place from numerous press briefings and Parliamentary debates to an ominous silence around the number of deaths, in particular. At the same time, as the article illustrates, the government's truth has not prevailed. Their twin strategy has been contested and resisted by grassroots organizations and radical lawyers who have demanded that Ministers should take responsibility for the tens of thousands of preventable deaths which have occurred. Rather than government talk and silence prevailing, it is the voices of the haunted relatives of the dead, demanding accountability, which are creating an alternative narrative.
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science
Reference75 articles.
1. Barr C. andP.Inman.2020.“‘Low‐Paid Workers More Likely to Die from Covid‐19 than Higher Earners.” The Guardian May 11 2020https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/11/manual-workers-likelier-to-die-from-covid-19-than-professionals
2. BBC News.2022a.“Newspaper headlines: ‘The gig is up Boris’ and ‘Johnson buckles’.”https://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-the-papers-61184349
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