|
original article |
Date |
Title |
Authors All Authors |
1 |
[GO] |
2024―Aug―01 |
Crisis Governance, (De)Mobilisation and New Inequalities: The Legacy of COVID-19 |
Emina Bužinkić, James Foley, Ewan Kerr |
2 |
[GO] |
2024―Jun―11 |
COVID-19 Emergency Governance in Croatia: The Case of Perpetual Exception and Securitized Disenfranchisement |
Emina Bužinkić, Senada Šelo Šabić |
3 |
[GO] |
2024―Jun―11 |
Beyond Formal Structures: Exploring Bottom-Up Governance Dynamics in the Assyrian Community’s COVID-19 Response in Germany |
Soner Barthoma |
4 |
[GO] |
2024―Jun―10 |
A ‘Romantic Public Tragedy’? COVID Pandemic and the Changes of Governance in Poland |
Anna Cichecka, Mateusz Karolak, Wojciech Ufel |
5 |
[GO] |
2024―Jun―04 |
Organising Irresponsibility: Pandemic Management, State Transformation and the Diversion of Class Politics in Scotland’s COVID-19 Response |
James Foley, Ewan Kerr |
6 |
[GO] |
2024―Feb―26 |
Book Review: Covid-19 and the Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty: Studies of Social Phenomena and Social Theory Across 6 Continents by Patrick R. Brown and Jens O. Zinn |
Yongjin Wang |
7 |
[GO] |
2024―Jan―30 |
Pandemic Stories From the Margins: Migrant Experiences of Social Exclusion During COVID-19 |
Alicja Bobek, Lina Sandström |
8 |
[GO] |
2023―Aug―28 |
COVID-19 and the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program in Puerto Rico: Anti-Corruption, Fraud Prevention, and Punishment |
Jose Atiles |
9 |
[GO] |
2023―Jul―03 |
Vaccine Hesitancy and Attitudes Toward Elite Knowledge in the United States During COVID-19 |
Jeremiah Morelock, Andressa Michelotti, Ly Hoang Minh Uyen |
10 |
[GO] |
2023―Mar―01 |
Imagining Crises of Neoliberalism: Covid-19 Pandemic and (Im)Possibilities of Change in Turkey’s Labour Regime |
Erdem Damar |
11 |
[GO] |
2022―Jun―07 |
‘The Catastrophic World’: Capitalism, Climate Crisis, COVID-19, and C. Wright Mills |
Zaheer Baber |
12 |
[GO] |
2022―May―03 |
‘No South Asian Riders, Please’: The Politics of Visibilisation in Platformed Food Delivery Work during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Hong Kong |
Lisa Y.M. Leung |
13 |
[GO] |
2022―Apr―09 |
Gramsci, the Relativity of the Integral State-Society, and the COVID-19 Interregnum |
Yue Zhou Lin |
14 |
[GO] |
2022―Jan―29 |
Conspiracy Theories and the Manufacture of Dissent: QAnon, the ‘Big Lie’, Covid-19, and the Rise of Rightwing Propaganda |
Anthony R. DiMaggio |
15 |
[GO] |
2022―Jan―27 |
Marketization in Crisis: The Political Economy of COVID-19 and the Unmaking of Public Transport in Stockholm |
Alexander Paulsson, Till Koglin |
16 |
[GO] |
2022―Jan―24 |
The Nexus of QAnon and COVID-19: Legitimation Crisis and Epistemic Crisis |
Jeremiah Morelock, Felipe Ziotti Narita |
17 |
[GO] |
2021―Aug―19 |
Book review: Communism in the Age of Covid-19 |
Costas Panayotakis |
18 |
[GO] |
2021―Apr―05 |
Lest We Forget: Politics of Multiculturalism in Canada Revisited during COVID-19 |
Eunjung Lee, Marjorie Johnstone |
19 |
[GO] |
2021―Feb―24 |
Pushed to the Margins: The Crisis Among Tribal Youth in India During COVID-19 |
Eswarappa Kasi, Atrayee Saha |
20 |
[GO] |
2021―Feb―12 |
A Class Analysis of the Expansion of COVID-19 in Peru: The Case of Metropolitan Lima |
Jan Lust |
21 |
[GO] |
2020―Dec―18 |
The Murderous Coronavirus: Data and Statistics to Die or to Adapt, But Together - That is the Question |
Pali Lehohla |
22 |
[GO] |
2020―Dec―12 |
COVID-19 and Other Challenges: A Case Study of Certified Organic Green Tea Producers in China |
Ksenia Gerasimova, Jiping Sheng, Jiang Zhao |
23 |
[GO] |
2020―Dec―12 |
Does COVID-19 as a Long Wave Turning Point Mean the End of Neoliberalism? |
Sadık Kılıç |
24 |
[GO] |
2020―Dec―01 |
Gender-Based Violence, Twin Pandemic to COVID-19 |
Judy Dlamini |
25 |
[GO] |
2020―Nov―30 |
Impact of COVID-19 on Migrant Labourers of India and China |
Rajiv Ranjan |
26 |
[GO] |
2020―Nov―30 |
War, Heroes and Sacrifice: Masking Neoliberal Violence During the COVID-19 Pandemic |
Ben A Lohmeyer, Nik Taylor |
27 |
[GO] |
2020―Nov―11 |
Human Rights-inspired Governmentality: COVID-19 through a Human Dignity Perspective |
Enzo Colombo |
28 |
[GO] |
2020―May―29 |
From COVID-19 to the End of Neoliberalism |
Alfredo Saad-Filho |