The Ethnographic Study of Infectious Disease Epidemics
A special issue of Pathogens (ISSN 2076-0817). This special issue belongs to the section "Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2022) | Viewed by 12970
Special Issue Editors
Interests: syndemics; ecosyndemics; climate change
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: syndemics; HIV; biopolitics; refugee integration
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Epidemics are biosocial events that produce both biological and social crisis, yet as seen in the case of the COVID-19 pandemic, policy and practical focus tend to concentrate on the biology of disease and its treatment or prevention despite the fact that social factors have shaped all aspects of the pandemic, from who gets sick to who dies, to who gets vaccinated, to what people learn about COVID-19. As a method, ethnography entails researchers embedding themselves for a prolonged period in a field site of study in order to systemically document the events that transpire, relationship processes (including interspecies relationships), day-to-day lives, behaviors, and interactions of a community of people, including online communities and interactions, and the social and physical contexts of everyday life. In a globalized world, ethnography has evolved to study multi-site phenomena and cross-national social hierarchies. Ethnography provides an on-the-ground (and increasingly, on the internet) method for the direct study of the complex social side of epidemics and biosocial processes. As a result, ethnographic studies of epidemics shed light on five critical issues: popular understandings and responses; the social construction of risk; interspecies entanglements and disease transmission; social injustice and vulnerability to infection; and social factors and fractures in counter-epidemic intervention. The proposed Special Issue will include a curated set of epidemic ethnographies from across the globe.
Prof. Dr. Merrill Singer
Dr. Nicola Bulled
Guest Editors
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