The trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemic

The trip by Dominic Cummings, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's then right‐hand man, to Durham in April 2020, in seeming violation of the rules of social distancing he had helped put in place, led to intense media scrutiny and public outrage. That there might be ‘One rule for them, and one...

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Main Author: Clarke, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021
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author Clarke, M
author_facet Clarke, M
author_sort Clarke, M
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description The trip by Dominic Cummings, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's then right‐hand man, to Durham in April 2020, in seeming violation of the rules of social distancing he had helped put in place, led to intense media scrutiny and public outrage. That there might be ‘One rule for them, and one for the rest of us’ became a stick to beat the government with and arguably contributed to Cummings’ eventual departure from Downing Street. This article focuses on the defence he put forward at the time. Rather than breaking the rules, he had followed them, he argued, providing a series of justifications, one of which led to widespread ridicule, the rest being largely dismissed. Rules of social distancing and the public's compliance with them have been of global concern during the coronavirus pandemic. I argue that the Cummings incident shows both the complexity of ordinary notions of what it means to follow a rule, and a tendency for that complexity to be left undiscussed in both scientific and public debate – to all our detriment.
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spelling oxford-uuid:2ecd51a2-8f45-4bab-8f11-50185fc880ae2023-04-04T09:49:25ZThe trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemicJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2ecd51a2-8f45-4bab-8f11-50185fc880aeEnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2021Clarke, MThe trip by Dominic Cummings, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's then right‐hand man, to Durham in April 2020, in seeming violation of the rules of social distancing he had helped put in place, led to intense media scrutiny and public outrage. That there might be ‘One rule for them, and one for the rest of us’ became a stick to beat the government with and arguably contributed to Cummings’ eventual departure from Downing Street. This article focuses on the defence he put forward at the time. Rather than breaking the rules, he had followed them, he argued, providing a series of justifications, one of which led to widespread ridicule, the rest being largely dismissed. Rules of social distancing and the public's compliance with them have been of global concern during the coronavirus pandemic. I argue that the Cummings incident shows both the complexity of ordinary notions of what it means to follow a rule, and a tendency for that complexity to be left undiscussed in both scientific and public debate – to all our detriment.
spellingShingle Clarke, M
The trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemic
title The trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemic
title_full The trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemic
title_fullStr The trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemic
title_full_unstemmed The trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemic
title_short The trial of Dominic Cummings: rules and reason in the pandemic
title_sort trial of dominic cummings rules and reason in the pandemic
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