Moral Panics and Social Control in the COVID-19 Pandemic presents a series of case studies which focus on particular social processes and interactions during the COVID-19 pandemic, applying the tools offered by classical studies on moral panic and moral panic theory to illuminate both political and popular responses.
Each case study explores the emergence, development, and impact of forms of moral panic in response to the coronavirus outbreak. In doing so, each chapter addresses the intersectional impact of moral panics upon vulnerable and/or stigmatized groups and outlines how moral panics have informed policies, interventions, and social mechanisms introduced by governments. Incorporating case studies from across the globe and drawing upon approaches from different disciplines, the chapters in this volume offer a wide-ranging and multi-faceted analysis of the varying responses to the coronavirus outbreak.
The book highlights aspects of interest for students and scholars in the social sciences, educators, policymakers, and practitioners with an interest in moral panics, responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, and mechanisms of social control.
Moral Panics and Social Control in the Covid-19 Pandemic presents a series of case studies which focus on particular social processes and interactions during the COVID-19 pandemic, applying the tools offered by classical studies on moral panic and moral panic theory to illuminate both political and popular responses.
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Routledge UK/ROW Title: Moral Panics and Social Control in the Covid-19 Pandemic ISBN: 9781032591469 was successfully transmitted to the Library of Congress.
Foreword
A moral(izing) virus. An introduction
Chapter
1. Navigating fear: how the pandemic moral regulation affected
social control with adverse impacts on Italian society
Chapter
2. Tackling moral panic on Covid-19 pandemic: highlights of the
institutional response against infodemic in the Italian context
Chapter
3. Angels and No Vax. Moral Panic and Culture of Healthcare
Control: The Impact of Covid on Medical Staff in Italy
Chapter
4. Care home staff and the COVID-19 vaccine mandate. The moral panic
that nobody showed up for
Chapter
5. Media representations of COVID-19 pandemic and the spread of
moral panic in the Iranian society: a case study
Chapter
6. Disease Spreaders. Anti-Roma Racism in the Time of COVID-19
Chapter
7. Intersecting Racialized and Health Panics: Expanding the Regime
of Illegality Under the Trump Administration
Chapter
8. Moral Panic and Ethnic Minorities During the COVID-19 Pandemic:
Difference, Control and Ethnic Exclusion in Berlin and Seville
Social control and moral panics in pandemic times. A conclusion
Morena Tartari is Associate Professor of Criminology and Sociology at the Department of Social Sciences, Northumbria University, UK.
Cirus Rinaldi is Professor of Sociology of Law, Deviance, and Social Change in the Department of Cultures and Societies of the University of Palermo, Italy.
Riccardo Caldarera received his masters degree in Criminological and Forensic Psychology from the University of Turin. He is a PhD student in Disuguaglianze, differenze, partecipazione at the University of Palermo, Italy.