Surging Solidarity: Reorienting Ethics for Pandemics

2020 
Public discourse about ethics in the COVID-19 pandemic has tended to focus on scarcity of resources and the protection of civil liberties We show how these preoccupations reflect an established disaster imaginary that orients the ethics of response In this paper, we argue that pandemic ethics should instead be oriented through a relational account of persons as vulnerable vectors em-bedded in existing networks of care We argue for the creation of a new disaster imaginary to shape our own understandings of the interrelated social, political, and economic hardships under conditions of social distancing We develop a pandemic ethics framework rooted in uBuntu and care ethics that makes visible the underlying multidimensional structural inequities of the pandemic, attending to the problems of resource scarcity and inequities in mortality while insisting on a response that surges existing and emergent forms of solidarity © 2020 by Johns Hopkins University Press
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