Social Instability and Community Opportunity During Pandemic Season (Coronavirus Reflections)
The year 2019* included surreal predictions of an impeached president getting a swing at a re-election campaign announced alongside terrifyingly heartbreaking images of large swaths of Australia on fire, endangering cities and animals alike. A year later, and things feel no less surreal, as the Coronavirus is on every airwave and Facebook post — anxiously stuck on everyone’s mind as we commit to community support via social distancing practices. There are many sites, videos, and other media out there delivering vital information on how to minimize the chances of catching and spreading COVID-19, also known as the Coronavirus. Alongside statistics and poignant coverage and nods to the work being done by medical professionals and essential workers, the rest of the news is largely focused on how a handful of elite political and economic actors are working to restabilize society and return us to order. A few have noted, however, that within catastrophe lies opportunity. The scale of the opportunity is grand, too, given the series of disasters we find ourselves in.
Pandemics and other catastrophes provide powerful impetus towards political and social power-shifts. There is precedent for significant social change to occur in the following of a disaster; a prime example is New Orleans…