How mutual aid proliferation developed solidarity and sense of collective responsibility in the early months of COVID‐19

Author:

Bender Kimberly1ORCID,Saavedra Kate1,Milligan Tara1,Littman Danielle Maude2,Becker‐Hafnor Trish1,Dunbar Annie Zean1,Boyett Madi1,Holloway Brendon1,Morris Karaya1

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Social Work University of Denver Denver Colorado USA

2. School of Social Work University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USA

Abstract

AbstractAlthough mutual aid organizing is a social movement practice long sustained by queer/trans people, immigrants, people of color, and disability communities, among other communities pushed to the margins of society, with the emergence of the COVID‐19 pandemic, and subsequent government failures in addressing unmet needs, mutual aid proliferated into new (and more socially privileged) communities in the United States and across the world. Amidst this landscape of extraordinary and unique crises, our study sought to understand the benefits experienced by those engaged in mutual aid in the early months of the COVID‐19 pandemic in the state of Colorado, United States. Our team conducted semistructured individual interviews with 25 individuals participating in mutual aid through groups organized on social media or through intentional communities. We found that participants, who engaged in mutual aid in the early months of the COVID‐19 pandemic, built empathy, a sense of nonjudgement, and critical consciousness as they created common ground as humans. Participants also found mutual aid engagement to provide nourishing support, to hold pain among more people, and, simply to “feel good.” We discuss the potential implications of these benefits for sustaining mutual aid movements through the ongoing COVID‐19 pandemic in the United States and beyond.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Applied Psychology,Health (social science)

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