Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them

The global COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated infrastructural, societal, and resource inequalities along racial and socioeconomic lines. Many countries have struggled to provide adequate COVID testing and healthcare. Denmark has been exceptional in its investment in a hyper-efficient and ever-present...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Natalie Marie Gulsrud, Henriette Steiner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.838084/full
_version_ 1811260713954443264
author Natalie Marie Gulsrud
Henriette Steiner
author_facet Natalie Marie Gulsrud
Henriette Steiner
author_sort Natalie Marie Gulsrud
collection DOAJ
description The global COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated infrastructural, societal, and resource inequalities along racial and socioeconomic lines. Many countries have struggled to provide adequate COVID testing and healthcare. Denmark has been exceptional in its investment in a hyper-efficient and ever-present infrastructure, with testing tents distributed across the country. In this article we ask: What is the impact of this infrastructure in terms of the (urban) culture that is built around testing? And what does that mean in terms of data management and mass surveillance? As a public good, the COVID-19 testing infrastructure has costs and benefits, but these are not always clear. They concern future urban life and data management, and our ability to draw a boundary around ourselves—that is, biopolitics. At the time of writing, with the Omicron variant on the rise, we are hovering on the threshold between new restrictions and a post-COVID urban reality. Now is the time to take stock of the COVID infrastructure's spatial, temporal, and political dimensions, and of what they mean for urban decision-making, governance, justice, and democracy. To do so, and following philosopher and legal scholar Martha Nussbaum, we suggest the deployment of a narrative approach for the education of democratic citizenship and, indeed, for justice.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T18:51:40Z
format Article
id doaj.art-1ab85655b2724455be0dedf2aa8fb5be
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2624-9634
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T18:51:40Z
publishDate 2022-03-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
spelling doaj.art-1ab85655b2724455be0dedf2aa8fb5be2022-12-22T03:20:27ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainable Cities2624-96342022-03-01410.3389/frsc.2022.838084838084Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock ThemNatalie Marie GulsrudHenriette SteinerThe global COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated infrastructural, societal, and resource inequalities along racial and socioeconomic lines. Many countries have struggled to provide adequate COVID testing and healthcare. Denmark has been exceptional in its investment in a hyper-efficient and ever-present infrastructure, with testing tents distributed across the country. In this article we ask: What is the impact of this infrastructure in terms of the (urban) culture that is built around testing? And what does that mean in terms of data management and mass surveillance? As a public good, the COVID-19 testing infrastructure has costs and benefits, but these are not always clear. They concern future urban life and data management, and our ability to draw a boundary around ourselves—that is, biopolitics. At the time of writing, with the Omicron variant on the rise, we are hovering on the threshold between new restrictions and a post-COVID urban reality. Now is the time to take stock of the COVID infrastructure's spatial, temporal, and political dimensions, and of what they mean for urban decision-making, governance, justice, and democracy. To do so, and following philosopher and legal scholar Martha Nussbaum, we suggest the deployment of a narrative approach for the education of democratic citizenship and, indeed, for justice.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.838084/fullwhite tentsCOVID-19 testinghyper-infrastructuresurveillancebiobankjustice
spellingShingle Natalie Marie Gulsrud
Henriette Steiner
Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them
Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
white tents
COVID-19 testing
hyper-infrastructure
surveillance
biobank
justice
title Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them
title_full Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them
title_fullStr Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them
title_full_unstemmed Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them
title_short Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them
title_sort justice and the pandemic city how the pandemic has revealed social urban and data injustices and how a narrative approach can unlock them
topic white tents
COVID-19 testing
hyper-infrastructure
surveillance
biobank
justice
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.838084/full
work_keys_str_mv AT nataliemariegulsrud justiceandthepandemiccityhowthepandemichasrevealedsocialurbananddatainjusticesandhowanarrativeapproachcanunlockthem
AT henriettesteiner justiceandthepandemiccityhowthepandemichasrevealedsocialurbananddatainjusticesandhowanarrativeapproachcanunlockthem