COVID‐19 stigma, Australia and slow violence: An analysis of 21 months of COVID news reporting

Author:

Georgeou Nichole1ORCID,Buhler King Cymbeline2,Tame Lilian2,Ergler Christina3,Huish Robert4

Affiliation:

1. Humanitarian and Development Research Initiative (HADRI), School of Social Sciences Western Sydney University Kingswood New South Wales Australia

2. School of Social Sciences Western Sydney University Kingswood New South Wales Australia

3. School of Geography/Te Iho Whenua University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

4. Department of International Development Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

Abstract

AbstractThroughout the peak periods of Australia's COVID‐19 pandemic experience of 2020–2021, some lower socioeconomic areas with high migrant populations in Sydney and Melbourne were subjected to strict lockdown enforcement that included heavy police surveillance not experienced in the more affluent areas of these cities. Analysis of four major newspapers' COVID‐19 coverage from January 2020 to September 2021 reveals their reporting focussed on aspects of individual behaviour that inferred people from lower socioeconomic areas had a heightened risk of exposure to COVID‐19. We argue this media portrayal of severe lockdowns and policing measures played a prominent role in exacerbating previously existing stigma as it compounded the stigma levelled at those communities. It further contributed to an “us and them” mentality that aligned with persistent structural inequality to compound existing stigma to develop a slow violence of COVID‐19‐related stigma. The lens of slow violence allows us to track incremental stigmatising processes, often imperceptible when viewed in isolation. Axiomatic violence adds a complementary perspective to slow violence, highlighting the role of crisis and disciplinary behaviours in embedding structural violence into the social norms of daily life.

Funder

Nova Scotia Health Authority

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference54 articles.

1. Australian Government (AG). (2021)COVID‐19 Vaccine rollout 30 September 2021. Available from:https://www.health.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/2021/09/covid‐19‐vaccine‐rollout‐update‐30‐september‐2021.pdf[Accessed 12 December 2022].

2. Australian Parliament House (APH). (2020)COVID‐19: a chronology of state and territory government announcements (up until 30 June 2020). Available from:https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/rp/rp2021/Chronologies/COVID‐19StateTerritoryGovernmentAnnouncements#_Toc52275790[Accessed 10 December 2022].

3. Baker J.&Wade M.(2021)A tale of two Sydneys.Sydney Morning Herald 14 August. Available from:www.smh.com.au[Accessed 30th May 2022].

4. Family Secrets and the Slow Violence of Social Stigma

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